1 Introduction
Let G be a discrete group and π a unitary representation of G on some Hilbert space ℋ. For a finite set F⊂G and ε>0, a vector ξ∈ℋ is (F,ε)-invariant if maxg∈F∥π(g)ξ-ξ∥<ε. Recall that π almost has invariant vectors if, for every pair (F,ε), the group G has (F,ε)-vectors; and that the group G has Kazhdan’s Property (T) or is a Kazhdan group if every unitary representation of G almost having invariant vectors, has non-zero invariant vectors; see e.g. [3] for Property (T).
The definition can be reformulated in terms of weak containment of representations: G has Property (T) if every unitary representation weakly containing the trivial representation of G, contains it strongly (see [3, Remark 1.1.2]). Crucial for us is an equivalent characterization due to P. S. Wang [12, Corollary 1.9 and Theorem 2.1]: the group G has Property (T) if and only if for some (hence every) irreducible finite-dimensional unitary representation σ of G, every unitary representation π of G that contains σ weakly, contains it strongly.
It is a simple but useful fact that, if G has Property (T) and π is a unitary representation almost having invariant vectors, “almost invariant vectors are close to invariant vectors”. More precisely, we have the following.
Proposition 1.1 ([3, Proposition 1.1.9]).
Let G be a Kazhdan group. If S is a finite generating set of G and ε0 is the corresponding Kazhdan constant, then for every δ∈]0,1[ and every unitary representation π of G, any (S,ε0δ)-invariant vector ξ satisfies ∥ξ-Pξ∥≤δ∥ξ∥, where P is the orthogonal projection on the subspace of π(G)-invariant vectors.
For a Kazhdan group G and a unitary representation π of G, fix a unit vector ξ and look at the coefficient function
ϕπ,ξ(g)=〈π(g)ξ,ξ〉 (g∈G).
The question we first address in this paper is: if ϕπ,ξ is close to some coefficient of an irreducible finite-dimensional unitary representation σ of G, must ξ be close to a finite-dimensional invariant subspace of π carrying a sub-representation isomorphic to σ? We will see that, in analogy to Proposition 1.1, the answer is positive – with some care.
Definition 1.2.
Let G be a finitely generated group with a symmetric finite generating set S⊆G containing e and let ϕ be some normalized positive definite function on G associated with a unitary irreducible representation σ, of finite dimension d. Let π be some unitary representation of G on ℋ. Let ε>0. Say that a unit vector ξ∈ℋ is (π,ϕ,ε)-good if for every s∈S2d2+1 we have |ϕπ,ξ(s)-ϕ(s)|<ε.
Note that Sk is just the ball of radius k centered at the identity in G. So there is a certain lack of uniformity in Definition 1.2: we require an approximation of ϕπ,ξ by ϕ on a ball whose size depends on the dimension of the representation d. Our main result, proved in Section 2, can be viewed as a quantitative version of Wang’s result.
Theorem 1.3.
Let G be a discrete Kazhdan group, S a finite symmetric generating set with e∈S, and let ϕ be a normalized positive definite function on G associated with a finite-dimensional unitary irreducible representation σ of G. For every δ∈]0,1[ there exists εϕ,δ>0 such that for every unitary representation π of G on a Hilbert space H, and every unit vector x∈H that is (π,ϕ,εϕ,δ)-good, there exists a unit vector x′∈H with ∥x-x′∥≤δ such that the restriction of π to the span of π(G)x′ is isomorphic to σ.
In Section 3, we apply Theorem 1.3 to the study of the global structure of the space of unitary representations of Kazhdan groups. Let us start with the notation. Let G be an arbitrary countable group and let ℋ be a separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. The set Rep(G,ℋ) of all homomorphisms from G into the unitary group U(ℋ) can be viewed as a closed subset of the product space U(ℋ)G, when we equip U(ℋ) with the strong operator topology. With this identification, Rep(G,ℋ) is a Polish (i.e. separable and completely metrizable) space. We refer the reader to the work [8], especially to the section on the spaces of unitary representations, for more information about this point of view on unitary representations. Recall that two unitary representations π1,π2∈Rep(G,ℋ) are isomorphic, or unitarily equivalent if there is a unitary operator ϕ∈U(ℋ) such that π1(g)=ϕπ2(g)ϕ* for every g∈G. Notice that this is an orbit equivalence relation given by the action of the unitary group U(ℋ) on the space Rep(G,ℋ) by conjugation. Kechris raised the question (see again the section on the space of unitary representations in [8]) of whether or not there are countable groups with a generic unitary representation, where “generic” here means its conjugacy class is large in the sense of Baire category, i.e. a representation whose class under the unitary equivalence contains a dense Gδ subset. As a matter of fact, we note that it follows from the topological zero-one law that for every countable group G either there is a generic representation in Rep(G,ℋ), or all conjugacy classes are meager (see e.g. [7, Theorem 8.46]; to apply it, note that there is a dense conjugacy class in Rep(G,ℋ) – indeed, take some countable dense set of representations from Rep(G,ℋ) and consider their direct sum).
Here as an application of Theorem 1.3 we prove the following result.
Theorem 1.4.
Let G be a discrete Kazhdan group such that finite-dimensional representations are dense in the unitary dual G^. Then there is a generic unitary representation of G.
We note that, although not explicitly stated there, this result already follows from a more general result of Kerr, Li and Pichot from [9], where they prove (see Theorem 2.5 there) that if A is a separable C*-algebra where finite-dimensional representations are dense in A^, then there is a dense Gδ class in Rep(A,ℋ). Theorem 1.4 is then a special case for A=C*(G). Our proof is nevertheless done by more elementary means, in particular it does not invoke Voiculescu’s theorem (see [9, proof of Theorem 2.5] for details).
The converse of Theorem 1.4 can be also derived from [9], see Remark 3.1 below.
Another open question posed by Kechris in [8, Problem H.16] is whether the subset of those representations π∈Rep(G,ℋ), where G is still a countable group, that are equivalent to Koopman representations, is meager in Rep(G,ℋ) or not. Such representations are called realizable by an action in [8]. Let us recall the terminology first. Let (X,μ) be a standard probability space (i.e. a space isomorphic to the unit interval [0,1] equipped with the Lebesgue measure). Let α:G↷(X,μ) be an action of a countable group G on X by measure-preserving measurable transformations. Consider the unitary representation πα:G→L2(X,μ) defined by πα(g)f(x)=f(α(g-1,x)) for every f∈L2(X,μ). The Koopman representation of α is the restriction of πα to the invariant subspace L02(X,μ), which is the orthogonal complement of the invariant subspace of constant functions.
In Section 4 we prove the following result addressing the question of Kechris.
Theorem 1.5.
Let G be a discrete Kazhdan group such that finite-dimensional representations are dense in the unitary dual G^. Then the set of representations realizable by an action is comeager in Rep(G,H).
Let us record that the condition that finite-dimensional representations are dense in the unitary dual G^ is, by the result of Archbold from [1], equivalent with the statement that the full group C*-algebra C*(G) is residually finite-dimensional. That is in turn, by the result of Exel and Loring from [6] (see also [11]), equivalent with the statement that finite-dimensional representations are dense in Rep(G,ℋ), which we shall use in the proof. Note that we call a representation π∈Rep(G,ℋ) finite-dimensional if the subalgebra π(G) generates in B(ℋ) is finite-dimensional.
The existence of infinite discrete Kazhdan groups with residually finite-dimensional C*-algebras seems to be open – see [3, Question 7.10] and also Lubotzky and Shalom [10, Question 6.5] where they ask if there are infinite discrete Kazhdan groups with property FD, which is strictly stronger than having a residually finite-dimensional C*-algebra (a group has property FD if representations factoring through finite groups are dense in the unitary dual).
Question 1.6.
It is known that being residually finite is not a sufficient condition to have a residually finite-dimensional C*-algebra by a result of Bekka [2]. However how about being LERF? (Recall that a finitely generated group is LERF if any finitely generated subgroup is the intersection of the finite index subgroups containing it.) Ershov and Jaikin-Zapirain constructed in [5] a Kazhdan group which is LERF. Is its group C*-algebra residually finite-dimensional?
Remark 1.7.
We note that on the other hand we cannot exclude the possibility of proving by a different argument that for every infinite group G, all classes in Rep(G,ℋ) are meager. That would together with Theorem 1.4 give that there are no infinite Kazhdan groups with a residually finite-dimensional C*-algebra.
2 A quantitative version of Wang’s theorem
Let G be an infinite, finitely generated group. Let S be a finite, symmetric, generating set of G, with e∈S. Let ℂG be the complex group ring of G.
2.1 Quantifying the Burnside theorem
Let σ be an irreducible unitary representation of dimension d, i.e. a homomorphism σ:G→Ud(ℂ) such that σ(G) has no proper invariant subspace. The classical Burnside theorem says that σ(ℂG)=Md(ℂ), i.e. σ(G) contains a basis of Md(ℂ).
Definition 2.1.
Set k(σ)=min{k>0:dimℂspanσ(Sk)=d2}.
Lemma 2.2.
There is a constant C>0 (only depending on S) such that
Clogd≤k(σ)≤d2.
Proof.
We have
d2=dimℂspanσ(Sk(σ))≤|σ(Sk(σ))|≤|Sk(σ)|≤|S|k(σ).
Taking logarithms,
2log|S|logd≤k(σ).
To prove the upper bound, observe that the sequence spanσ(Sk) of subspaces of Md(ℂ) is strictly increasing for k<k(σ). Indeed, assume that k is such that spanσ(Sk)=spanσ(Sk+1): this means that spanσ(Sk) is stable by left multiplication by σ(S), hence by σ(G) as S is generating. Since the identity matrix is in σ(Sk), we have
σ(G)⊂spanσ(Sk),
hence k≥k(σ). From this it is clear that k(σ)≤d2.
∎
Let v be a unit vector in ℂd. Since v is cyclic for σ(G), the map
Tv:ℂSk(σ)→ℂd,f↦σ(f)v
is onto. Let (kerTv)⊥ denote the orthogonal of kerTv in ℂSk(σ) and let Uv be the inverse of the map Tv|(kerTv)⊥. Endow ℂSk(σ) with the ℓ1-norm, and let ∥Uv∥2→1 be the corresponding operator norm of Uv. So for every w a unit vector in ℂd, there exists f∈ℂSk(σ) with ∥f∥1≤∥Uv∥2→1 such that σ(f)v=w.
Lemma 2.3.
There exists M>0 such that for every two unit vectors v,w∈Cd, there exists f∈CSk(σ) with ∥f∥1≤M such that σ(f)v=w.
Proof.
This is the preceding observation plus compactness of the unit sphere in ℂd: the constant M=max∥v∥=1∥Uv∥2→1 does the job.
∎
2.2 From weak containment to weak containment à la Zimmer
Recall that, if π,ρ are unitary representations of a discrete group G, the representation π is weakly contained in the representation ρ (i.e. π⪯ρ) if every function of positive type associated with π can be pointwise approximated by finite sums of positive definite type associated with ρ. If π is irreducible, this is equivalent to requiring that every normalized function of positive type associated with π can be pointwise approximated by normalized functions of positive type associated with ρ (see [3, Proposition F.1.4]).
Zimmer introduced in [13, Definition 7.3.5] a different, inequivalent notion of weak containment. A n×n-submatrix of π is a function
G→Mn(ℂ),g↦(〈π(g)ei,ej〉)1≤i,j≤n,
where {e1,…,en} is an orthonormal family in ℋπ. Say that π is weakly contained in ρ in Zimmer’s sense (i.e. π⪯Zρ) if, for every n>0, every n×n-submatrix of π can be pointwise approximated by n×n-submatrices of ρ. The exact relation with the classical notion recalled above, is worked out in [3, Remark F.1.2 (ix)]; in particular, when π is irreducible, π⪯ρ implies π⪯Zρ. Our first goal will be to make the latter statement quantitative. For this we need a definition.
Let ϕ be associated with σ, as in Definition 1.2. Let v be a unit vector in ℋσ such that ϕ=ϕσ,v. Let e1,…,ed be an orthonormal basis of ℂd; by Lemma 2.3, we find functions f1,…,fd∈ℂSk(σ) with maxi∥fi∥1≤M such that
σ(fi)v=ei (i=1,…,d).
Lemma 2.4.
Let π∈Rep(G,H) be a unitary representation. Assume that there is ε>0 and a unit vector η∈H such that for s∈S2k(σ)+1 we have
|〈π(s)η,η〉-〈σ(s)v,v〉|<ε.
Set ηi=π(fi)η. Then for i,j=1,…,d and g∈S,
|〈σ(g)ei,ej〉-〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉|≤εM2.
Proof.
For g∈S,
|〈σ(g)ei,ej〉-〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉|
=|〈σ(g)σ(fi)v,σ(fj)v〉-〈π(g)π(fi)η,π(fj)η〉|
=|∑s,t∈Gfi(s)fj(t)¯(〈σ(t-1gs)v,v〉-〈π(t-1gs)η,η〉)|
≤∑s,t∈G|fi(s)||fj(s)||〈σ(t-1gs)v,v〉-〈π(t-1gs)η,η〉|.
Since the supports of the functions fi are contained in Sk(σ), and since we have t-1gs∈S2k(σ)+1 for s,t∈Sk(σ), we find, using the assumption, that
|〈σ(g)ei,ej〉-〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉|≤ε∑s,t∈G|fi(s)||fj(t)|=ε∥fi∥1∥fj∥1≤εM2,
as desired.
∎
In the previous proof, by applying the Gram–Schmidt orthonormalization process to the ηi, it is possible to show that the d×d-submatrix (〈σ(⋅)ei,ej〉)1≤i,j≤d of σ is close on S to some d×d-submatrix of α, with an explicit bound; but we do not need that fact at this point.
2.3 Quantifying Wang’s theorem
Let ℋσ be the (d-dimensional) Hilbert space of σ, and let ℋσ¯ be the conjugate Hilbert space (with complex conjugate scalar multiplication and complex conjugate inner product), equipped with the conjugate representation σ¯. Form the tensor product ℋσ¯⊗ℋπ, carrying the representation σ¯⊗π. Set ξi=ei⊗ηi and ξ=∑i=1dξi∈ℋσ¯⊗ℋπ, where the ei and ηi are as in the section above; observe that the ξi are pairwise orthogonal. We need an estimate on how ξ is moved by σ¯⊗π:
∥ξ-(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ∥2=2∥ξ∥2-2Re〈(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ,ξ〉
=2∑i=1d∥ξi∥2-2∑i,j=1dRe〈(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξi,ξj〉
=2∑i=1d∥ηi∥2-2∑i,j=1dRe〈ej,σ(g)ei〉〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉.
Observe that for every g∈G we have
d=∑i,j=1d〈σ(g)ei,ej〉〈ej,σ(g)ei〉
as the ei form an orthonormal basis. Subtracting and adding 2d to the previous formula, we get
∥ξ-(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ∥2
=2[∑i=1d(∥ηi∥2-1)]-2∑i,j=1dRe〈ej,σ(g)ei〉(〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉-〈σ(g)ei,ej〉)
hence, using Cauchy–Schwarz,
(2.1)∥ξ-(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ∥2
≤2∑i=1d|∥ηi∥2-1|+2∑i,j=1d|〈π(g)ηi,ηj〉-〈σ(g)ei,ej〉|.
Theorem 1.3 will follow immediately form the next proposition, together with Lemma 2.2
Proposition 2.5.
Let G be a discrete Kazhdan group, S a finite symmetric generating set with e∈S, and let ϕ be a normalized positive definite function on G associated with a finite-dimensional unitary irreducible representation σ of G. For every δ∈]0,1[ there exists εϕ,δ>0 such that for every π∈Rep(G,H), and every unit vector x∈H such that |ϕ(s)-ϕπ,x(s)|<εϕ,δ for s∈S2k(σ)+1, there exists a unit vector x′∈H with ∥x-x′∥≤δ such that the restriction of π to the span of π(G)x′ is isomorphic to σ.
Proof.
Set d=dimσ. Let v be a unit vector in ℋσ such that ϕ(g)=〈σ(g)v,v〉 for every g∈G. As in Section 2.2, for an orthonormal basis e1,…,ed of ℂd, we find functions f1,…,fd∈ℂSk(σ) with maxi∥fi∥1≤M such that
σ(fi)v=ei (i=1,…,d).
Let 0<ε0<2 be such that (S,ε0) is a Kazhdan pair for G. Fix δ∈]0,1[, and set
εϕ,δ=ε=δ2ε0224d(d+1)M2.
Let π∈Rep(G,ℋ) and let x∈ℋ be a unit vector with |ϕπ,x(s)-ϕ(s)|<ε for s∈S2k(σ)+1. Set ηi=π(fi)x. We may assume that e1=v and the function f1 is δe, so that η1=x. We want to prove that the vector
ξ=∑i=1d(ei⊗ηi)∈ℋσ¯⊗ℋ
is (S,tε0)-invariant for some 0<t<1, in order to apply Proposition 1.1.
For g∈S we have, by Lemma 2.4 and inequality (2.1),
∥ξ-(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ∥2≤2dεM2+2d2εM2=2d(d+1)εM2=δ2ε0212.
Again by Lemma 2.4, evaluated at g=e, we have
|∥ηi∥2-1|≤εM2<12,
hence 12≤∥ηi∥2≤32 and d2≤∥ξ∥2=∑i=1d∥ηi∥2≤3d2.
So that, for g∈S,
∥ξ-(σ¯⊗π)(g)ξ∥2≤δ2ε026d∥ξ∥2.
By Proposition 1.1, there exists a G-fixed ξ′∈ℋσ¯⊗ℋ such that
∥ξ-ξ′∥2≤δ26d∥ξ∥2.
Write ξ′=∑i=1dei⊗ζi, so that
∥ξ-ξ′∥2=∑i=1d∥ηi-ζi∥2.
Identify ℋσ¯⊗ℋ with the space of linear operators from ℋσ to ℋ (endowed with the Hilbert–Schmidt norm), via u⊗y↦(w↦〈w,u〉y). Then ξ′ identifies with the operator w↦∑i=1d〈w,ei〉ζi, which is therefore an intertwining operator between σ and π. The image of this operator, which is span{ζ1,…,ζd}, carries a sub-representation of π unitarily equivalent to σ (by Schur’s lemma). Set x′′=ζ1. Then
∥x-x′′∥2=∥η1-ζ1∥2≤∑i=1d∥ηi-ζi∥2=∥ξ-ξ′∥2
≤δ26d∥ξ∥2≤δ26d3d2=δ24,
i.e. ∥x-x′′∥≤δ2. Finally, set x′=x′′∥x′′∥, a unit vector in ℋ. Then by the triangle inequality,
∥x-x′∥≤∥x-x′′∥+∥x′′-x′∥=∥x-x′′∥+∥x′′∥|1-1∥x′′∥|
=∥x-x′′∥+|∥x′′∥-∥x∥|≤2∥x-x′′∥≤δ.
This concludes the proof.
∎
Question 2.6.
In the previous proof, the constant εϕ,δ depends on σ through the dimension d and the constant M from Lemma 2.3. By [12, Theorem 2.6], a discrete Kazhdan group has finitely many unitary irreducible representations of a given finite dimension (up to unitary equivalence), so Theorem 1.3 can be made uniform over all unitary irreducible representations σ with dimension less than a given dimension. Can it be made uniform over all finite-dimensional unitary representations?
3 Proof of Theorem 1.4
Let {Un} be a countable basis of open sets in the unit sphere K of ℋ, and let Φ be the set of all positive definite functions on G defining irreducible finite-dimensional representations. Notice that the set X′⊆Rep(G,ℋ) of all representations π such that for every n∈ℕ and every δ>0 there exist m>0, x∈Un, xi∈K, ci∈ℂ∖{0}, and ϕi∈Φ, i≤m, such that x=∑cixi, the xi are pairwise orthogonal and each xi is (π,ϕi,εϕi,δi′)-good, where δi′=δ|ci|.m, and εϕi,δi′ is given by Theorem 1.3, is a Gδ set. Indeed, for fixed n, δ, m, x, x¯=(x1,…,xm), c¯=(c1,…,cm), ϕ¯=(ϕ1,…,ϕm) as above, the set
Vx,x¯,c¯,ϕ¯n,δ,m={π∈Rep(G,ℋ):each xi is (π,ϕi,εϕi,δi′)-good}
is clearly open. We also set Vx,x¯,c¯,ϕ¯n,δ,m to be the empty set if the xi are not pairwise orthogonal or x≠∑cixi. Now we can define X′ by
X′=⋂n∈ℕ⋂δ∈ℚ+⋃m∈ℕ⋃x∈Un⋃x¯∈Km⋃c¯∈ℂm⋃ϕ¯∈ΦmVx,x¯,c¯,ϕ¯n,δ,m,
which is a Gδ condition.
Moreover, X′ is dense in Rep(G,ℋ) as it contains all direct sums of finite-dimensional representations, which, by our assumption, are dense in Rep(G,ℋ). This is because it is easy to see that for every such sum π there are densely many elements x∈K of the form ∑cixi, where xi are pairwise orthogonal unit vectors, and each xi is (π,ϕi,δ)-good for some ϕi and every δ>0.
Now we show that every representation in X′ is a direct sum of finite-dimensional representations. Fix π∈X′. Using Zorn’s lemma, we can decompose ℋ into ℋ0 and ℋ1 such that ℋ0 is the direct sum of all finite-dimensional representations contained in π. For i=0,1, let Pℋi be the orthogonal projection of ℋ on ℋi. Suppose that ℋ1 is not trivial, and fix 0<δ<1, x∈K, pairwise orthogonal xi∈K and ci∈ℂ∖{0}, i≤m, such that x=∑cixi, each xi is (π,ϕi,εϕi,δ|ci|.m)-good for some ϕi∈Φ, and
∥x-Pℋ0x∥>δ
(the last condition can be satisfied by choosing x in an appropriate Un): By Theorem 1.3, there exist xi′∈K, i≤m, inducing irreducible finite-dimensional representations, and such that
∥xi-xi′∥<δ|ci|.m,
that is, ∥x-∑cixi′∥<δ. But then, clearly, xi0′∉ℋ0 for some i0≤m, as if this were not the case, we would get that
∥x-∑cixi′∥≥∥x-Pℋ0x∥>δ.
Since Pℋ1 is a G-intertwiner, the image under Pℋ1 of the linear span of π(G)xi0′, is an invariant subspace of ℋ1, which is a contradiction.
Now let X′′ be the set of all representations that contain every finite-dimensional representation with infinite multiplicity. As G is a Kazhdan group, we can see that X′′ is given by a Gδ condition. Indeed, for [σ] the isomorphism class of a finite-dimensional unitary irreducible representation of G, and n>0, let V[σ],n be the set of representations π∈Rep(G,ℋ) such that [σ] appears in π with multiplicity at least n. Clearly, V[σ],n is open and
X′′=⋂[σ]⋂nV[σ],n,
where the intersection is countable because there are countably many [σ].
By our assumption on C*(G), the set X′′ is dense. Thus, X=X′∩X′′ is a dense Gδ set, all the representations of which are direct sums of finite-dimensional representations, each appearing with infinite multiplicity. Clearly, all elements in X are conjugate.∎
Remark 3.1.
The converse of Theorem 1.4 also follows from [9, Theorem 2.5]. That is, if either G does not have Property (T), or C*(G) is not residually finite-dimensional, then all classes in Rep(G,ℋ) are meager. We will now prove this. By [9, Theorem 2.5], if for a separable C*-algebra A the set of isolated points in A^ is not dense, then the restriction of the action of U(ℋ) by conjugation on a dense Gδ invariant subset of Rep(A,ℋ) is turbulent. That, by the definition of turbulence, in particular implies that every class in Rep(G,ℋ) is meager. Now take A=C*(G) and notice that isolated points in G^ correspond to finite-dimensional representations. Indeed, suppose that A is an arbitrary unital separable C*-algebra and π∈A^ is isolated. Then we can decompose A as I⊕J, where J^={π}. As J is a separable C*-algebra with a one-point spectrum, it is isomorphic to the compact operators on the Hilbert space ℋπ. Since A is unital, so is J, meaning that J and π are finite-dimensional.
It follows that when G does not have Property (T), G^ does not have isolated points, by [12, Theorem 2.1]; when C*(G) is not residually finite-dimensional, then the isolated points in G^ are not dense by Archbold’s main result in [1].
4 Proof of Theorem 1.5
For a unitary representation π, we denote by ∞⋅π the ℓ2-direct sum of countably many copies of π.
Lemma 4.1.
Let H be a locally compact group. Assume that H has (up to unitary equivalence) countably many finite-dimensional irreducible unitary representations σ1,σ2,… . Then the representation ⊕n=1∞∞⋅σn is unitarily equivalent to a Koopman representation.
Proof.
View σn as a continuous homomorphism H→U(Nn). Let Kn denote the closure of σn(H) in U(Nn), so that Kn is a compact group (on which H acts by left translations by elements of σn(H)). Let mn denote normalized Haar measure on Kn, and let λn denote the regular representation of Kn on L2(Kn,mm). For p≥1, let Kn,p denote a copy of Kn endowed with the measure 2-n-pmn. Set X=∐n,pKn,p, endowed with the H-invariant probability measure
μ=⊕n,p2-n-pmn.
Note that the H-representations on L2(X,μ) and on L02(X,μ) are equivalent, as L2(X,μ) contains the trivial representation with infinite multiplicity.
So it is enough to prove that the H-representation π on L2(X,μ) is equivalent to ⊕n=1∞∞⋅σn. To see this, first observe that π is equivalent to ⊕n∞⋅πn, where πn=λn∘σn. By the Peter–Weyl theorem, πn decomposes as a direct sum of finite-dimensional irreducible representations of H, hence of certain representations σk, and moreover σn is a sub-representation of πn (because the natural representation of Kn on ℂNn is irreducible, hence appears as a sub-representation of λn). This shows that ⊕n∞⋅πn is equivalent to ⊕n∞⋅σn.
∎
To prove Theorem 1.5, observe that a discrete Kazhdan group G satisfies the assumption of Lemma 4.1 (by [12, Theorem 2.6]). Let (σn)n∈ℕ be an enumeration of all finite-dimensional irreducible unitary representations of G. By Theorem 1.4 and its proof, the representation ⊕n=1∞∞⋅σn has a comeager conjugacy class.
In particular, we get the following statement which was proved in [4] for finite abelian groups.
Corollary 4.2.
Let G be a finite group. Then the set of unitary representations realizable by an action is comeager in Rep(G,H).
Remark 4.3.
Kechris proves (see [8, Section (F) in Appendix H]) that, if G is torsion-free abelian, then the set of representations realizable by an action is meager in Rep(G,ℋ).
References
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