Cayley graph


In mathematics, a Cayley graph, also known as a Cayley colour graph, Cayley diagram, group diagram, or colour group is a graph that encodes the abstract structure of a group. Its definition is suggested by Cayley's theorem and uses a specified, usually finite, set of generators for the group. It is a central tool in combinatorial and geometric group theory.

Definition

Suppose that is a group and is a generating set of. The Cayley graph is a colored directed graph constructed as follows:
In geometric group theory, the set is usually assumed to be finite, symmetric and not containing the identity element of the group. In this case, the uncolored Cayley graph is an ordinary graph: its edges are not oriented and it does not contain loops.

Examples

The group acts on itself by left multiplication. This may be viewed as the action of on its Cayley graph. Explicitly, an element maps a vertex to the vertex The set of edges within the Cayley graph is preserved by this action: the edge is transformed into the edge. The left multiplication action of any group on itself is simply transitive, in particular, the Cayley graph is vertex transitive. This leads to the following characterization of Cayley graphs:
To recover the group and the generating set from the Cayley graph select a vertex and label it by the identity element of the group. Then label each vertex of by the unique element of that transforms into The set of generators of that yields as the Cayley graph is the set of labels of the vertices adjacent to the selected vertex. The generating set is finite if and only if the graph is locally finite.

Elementary properties

If one, instead, takes the vertices to be right cosets of a fixed subgroup one obtains a related construction, the Schreier coset graph, which is at the basis of coset enumeration or the Todd–Coxeter process.

Connection to group theory

Knowledge about the structure of the group can be obtained by studying the adjacency matrix of the graph and in particular applying the theorems of spectral graph theory.
The genus of a group is the minimum genus for any Cayley graph of that group.

Geometric group theory

For infinite groups, the coarse geometry of the Cayley graph is fundamental to geometric group theory. For a finitely generated group, this is independent of choice of finite set of generators, hence an intrinsic property of the group. This is only interesting for infinite groups: every finite group is coarsely equivalent to a point, since one can choose as finite set of generators the entire group.
Formally, for a given choice of generators, one has the word metric, which determines a metric space. The coarse equivalence class of this space is an invariant of the group.

History

Cayley graphs were first considered for finite groups by Arthur Cayley in 1878. Max Dehn in his unpublished lectures on group theory from 1909–10 reintroduced Cayley graphs under the name Gruppenbild, which led to the geometric group theory of today. His most important application was the solution of the word problem for the fundamental group of surfaces with genus ≥ 2, which is equivalent to the topological problem of deciding which closed curves on the surface contract to a point.

Bethe lattice

The Bethe lattice or infinite Cayley tree is the Cayley graph of the free group on generators. A presentation of a group by generators corresponds to a surjective map from the free group on generators to the group and at the level of Cayley graphs to a map from the infinite Cayley tree to the Cayley graph. This can also be interpreted as the universal cover of the Cayley graph, which is not in general simply connected.