Ruzsa triangle inequality

In additive combinatorics, the Ruzsa triangle inequality, also known as the Ruzsa difference triangle inequality to differentiate it from some of its variants, bounds the size of the difference of two sets in terms of the sizes of both their differences with a third set. It was proven by Imre Ruzsa (1996),[1] and is so named for its resemblance to the triangle inequality. It is an important lemma in the proof of the Plünnecke-Ruzsa inequality.

Statement edit

If   and   are subsets of a group, then the sumset notation   is used to denote  . Similarly,   denotes  . Then, the Ruzsa triangle inequality states the following.

Theorem (Ruzsa triangle inequality) — If  ,  , and   are finite subsets of a group, then

 

An alternate formulation involves the notion of the Ruzsa distance.[2]

Definition. If   and   are finite subsets of a group, then the Ruzsa distance between these two sets, denoted  , is defined to be

 

Then, the Ruzsa triangle inequality has the following equivalent formulation:

Theorem (Ruzsa triangle inequality) — If  ,  , and   are finite subsets of a group, then

 

This formulation resembles the triangle inequality for a metric space; however, the Ruzsa distance does not define a metric space since   is not always zero.

Proof edit

To prove the statement, it suffices to construct an injection from the set   to the set  . Define a function   as follows. For each   choose a   and a   such that  . By the definition of  , this can always be done. Let   be the function that sends   to  . For every point   in the set is  , it must be the case that   and  . Hence,   maps every point in   to a distinct point in   and is thus an injection. In particular, there must be at least as many points in   as in  . Therefore,

 

completing the proof.

Variants of the Ruzsa triangle inequality edit

The Ruzsa sum triangle inequality is a corollary of the Plünnecke-Ruzsa inequality (which is in turn proved using the ordinary Ruzsa triangle inequality).

Theorem (Ruzsa sum triangle inequality) — If  ,  , and   are finite subsets of an abelian group, then

 

Proof. The proof uses the following lemma from the proof of the Plünnecke-Ruzsa inequality.

Lemma. Let   and   be finite subsets of an abelian group  . If   is a nonempty subset that minimizes the value of  , then for all finite subsets  

 

If   is the empty set, then the left side of the inequality becomes  , so the inequality is true. Otherwise, let   be a subset of   that minimizes  . Let  . The definition of   implies that   Because  , applying the above lemma gives

 

Rearranging gives the Ruzsa sum triangle inequality.


By replacing   and   in the Ruzsa triangle inequality and the Ruzsa sum triangle inequality with   and   as needed, a more general result can be obtained: If  ,  , and   are finite subsets of an abelian group then

 

where all eight possible configurations of signs hold. These results are also sometimes known collectively as the Ruzsa triangle inequalities.

References edit

  1. ^ Ruzsa, I. (1996). "Sums of finite sets". Number Theory: New York Seminar 1991-1995.
  2. ^ Tao, T.; Vu, V. (2006). Additive Combinatorics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85386-6.