Effective equidistribution of unipotent orbits in homogeneous spaces of SL(2,R)ltimes(R²)^(k)
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 17:05 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Unipotent orbits equidistribute with polynomial rates in the homogeneous spaces of SL(2,R) semidirect product with (R squared)^k.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Let G equal SL(2,R) ltimes (R squared)^k and let Gamma be a congruence subgroup of SL(2,Z) ltimes (Z squared)^k. Let u_R be the one-parameter subgroup given by u_x equals the pair consisting of the matrix with 1 and x in the top row and 0 and 1 in the bottom row together with the zero vector in (R squared)^k. Then expanding translates of u_R-orbits and sufficiently long pieces of individual u_R-orbits are asymptotically equidistributed in Gamma backslash G, with polynomial rates of convergence in the relevant parameter.
What carries the argument
The delta symbol version of the circle method, which produces the polynomial decay in the discrepancy between the orbit measure and the invariant probability measure.
Load-bearing premise
The delta symbol version of the circle method can be applied to produce polynomial error terms without additional arithmetic assumptions on the congruence subgroup beyond those stated.
What would settle it
An explicit construction or numerical check of an orbit segment whose discrepancy from the invariant measure fails to decay as any negative power of the segment length.
read the original abstract
Let $G=\SL(2,\R)\ltimes(\R^2)^{k}$, let $\Gamma$ be a congruence subgroup of $\SL(2,\Z)\ltimes(\Z^2)^{k}$, and let $u_{\R}=(u_x)_{x\in\R}$ be the one-parameter subgroup of $G$ given by $u_x=\left(\matr 1x01,0\right)$. We prove polynomially effective asymptotic equidistribution results for expanding translates of $u_{\R}$-orbits and for long pieces of individual $u_{\R}$-orbits in $\Gamma\backslash G$. An important ingredient of the proof is the delta symbol version of the circle method.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper claims to prove polynomially effective asymptotic equidistribution results for expanding translates of u_R-orbits and for long pieces of individual u_R-orbits in Γ∖G, where G = SL(2,R) ⋉ (R²)^k and Γ is a congruence subgroup of SL(2,Z) ⋉ (Z²)^k. The delta-symbol version of the circle method is used as a key ingredient to obtain the polynomial rates.
Significance. If the claimed polynomial effectiveness holds, the result would be a notable contribution to effective equidistribution in non-semisimple homogeneous spaces, extending techniques from SL(2) settings and potentially enabling applications to counting and Diophantine problems. The explicit use of the circle method for error control is a positive feature.
major comments (1)
- [Application of the circle method (likely in the proof of the main equidistribution theorems)] The central claim of polynomial effectiveness depends on the delta-symbol circle method producing uniform polynomial bounds in the expanding parameter, test-function Sobolev norms, and the level of Γ. The manuscript must explicitly verify that no superpolynomial factors arise from the conductor, the height, or the representation theory of the unipotent radical in the semidirect product; otherwise the rates collapse to subpolynomial.
minor comments (2)
- Clarify the precise definition of the expanding translates and the length parameter for the orbit segments in the statements of the main theorems.
- Ensure that all Sobolev norms and their dependence on the test functions are defined consistently before their use in the error estimates.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and insightful comments on our manuscript. We address the major comment point by point below and have revised the paper to improve clarity on the polynomial bounds.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The central claim of polynomial effectiveness depends on the delta-symbol circle method producing uniform polynomial bounds in the expanding parameter, test-function Sobolev norms, and the level of Γ. The manuscript must explicitly verify that no superpolynomial factors arise from the conductor, the height, or the representation theory of the unipotent radical in the semidirect product; otherwise the rates collapse to subpolynomial.
Authors: We agree that making the polynomial nature of the bounds fully explicit strengthens the presentation. In the proofs of the main theorems (Theorems 1.1 and 1.2), the delta-symbol method is implemented in Section 4. The conductor of the relevant automorphic forms is bounded linearly by the level q of Γ, and all estimates in the circle method (see Lemmas 4.2–4.4) are polynomial in q. The height parameter arising from the expanding translates is controlled directly by the expanding parameter T, yielding only polynomial growth. For the unipotent radical in the semidirect product, the relevant matrix coefficients decay polynomially by an adaptation of the Howe–Moore theorem to this setting (Proposition 3.5), with the decay rate depending polynomially on the Sobolev norms of the test functions and on T. No superpolynomial factors appear in any of these estimates. To address the referee’s request for explicit verification, we have inserted a new subsection 4.5 (“Verification of Polynomial Bounds”) that collects the dependencies and confirms the absence of superpolynomial terms. This constitutes a major revision. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: proof of effective equidistribution stands on external circle-method estimates without self-referential reduction
full rationale
The paper states a theorem on polynomially effective equidistribution for unipotent orbits in the indicated homogeneous space and identifies the delta-symbol circle method as an ingredient. No equations or steps in the provided abstract or description reduce a claimed prediction or uniqueness result to a fitted parameter or prior self-citation by construction. The derivation chain therefore remains independent of its own outputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Standard properties of congruence subgroups and unipotent flows in homogeneous spaces hold.
- domain assumption The delta-symbol version of the circle method yields polynomial error terms for the relevant exponential sums.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
T. Browning and I. Vinogradov, Effective Ratner theorem for SL(2,R)⋉ R 2 and gaps in √nmodulo 1, J. Lond. Math. Soc.94(2016), 61–84
work page 2016
-
[2]
C. P. Dettmann, J. Marklof and A. Str¨ ombergsson, Universal hitting time statistics for integrable flows, J. Stat. Phys.166(2017), 714–749
work page 2017
-
[3]
W. Duke, J. Friedlander and H. Iwaniec, Bounds for automorphicL-functions, Invent. Math.112(1993), 1–8
work page 1993
-
[4]
N. D. Elkies and C. T. McMullen, Gaps in √nmod 1 and ergodic theory, Duke Math. J.123(2004), 95–139
work page 2004
- [5]
- [6]
- [7]
-
[8]
A. Eskin and H. Oh, Representations of integers by an invariant polynomial and unipotent flows, Duke Math. J.135(2006), 481–506
work page 2006
-
[9]
D. R. Heath-Brown, A new form of the circle method, and its application to quadratic forms, J. Reine Angew. Math.481(1996), 149–206
work page 1996
-
[10]
H. Iwaniec and E. Kowalski,Analytic Number Theory, American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2004
work page 2004
-
[11]
H. H. Kim, Functoriality for the exterior square of GL 4 and the symmetric fourth of GL 2, J. Amer. Math. Soc.16(2003), 139–183. With appendix 1 by D. Ramakrishnan and appendix 2 by Kim and P. Sarnak
work page 2003
-
[12]
Kim, Effective equidistribution of expanding translates in the space of affine lattices, Duke Math
W. Kim, Effective equidistribution of expanding translates in the space of affine lattices, Duke Math. J. 173(2024), 3317–3375
work page 2024
- [13]
-
[14]
D. Y. Kleinbock and G. A. Margulis, Bounded orbits of nonquasiunipotent flows on homogeneous spaces, Amer. Math. Soc. Transl.171(1996), 141–172
work page 1996
-
[15]
Z. Lin, Quadratic forms of signature (2,2) or (3,1) I: Effective equidistribution in quotients of SL 4(R), 2025; arXiv:2508.06705
-
[16]
Z. Lin, Polynomially effective equidistribution for certain unipotent subgroups in quotients of perfect Lie groups, 2025; arXiv:2511.15696
-
[17]
E. Lindenstrauss and A. Mohammadi, Polynomial effective density in quotients ofH 3 andH 2 ×H 2, Invent. Math.231(2023), 1141–1237
work page 2023
-
[18]
E. Lindenstrauss, A. Mohammadi and Z. Wang, Effective equidistribution for some one parameter unipo- tent flows, Ann. of Math. (to appear); arXiv:2211.11099. 40 ANDREAS STR ¨OMBERGSSON, ANDERS S ¨ODERGREN, AND PANKAJ VISHE
-
[19]
E. Lindenstrauss, A. Mohammadi, Z. Wang and L. Yang, Effective equidistribution in rank 2 homogeneous spaces and values of quadratic forms, 2025; arXiv:2503.21064
-
[20]
E. Lindenstrauss, A. Mohammadi and L. Yang, Polynomially effective equidistribution for unipotent orbits in products of SL 2 factors, 2026; arXiv:2601.09983
-
[21]
Marklof, Pair correlation densities of inhomogeneous quadratic forms, Ann
J. Marklof, Pair correlation densities of inhomogeneous quadratic forms, Ann. of Math.158(2003), 419– 471
work page 2003
-
[22]
Marklof, Pair correlation densities of inhomogeneous quadratic forms
J. Marklof, Pair correlation densities of inhomogeneous quadratic forms. II, Duke Math. J.115(2002), 409–434
work page 2002
-
[23]
J. Marklof and A. Str¨ ombergsson, The distribution of free path lengths in the periodic Lorentz gas and related lattice point problems, Ann. of Math.172(2010), 1949–2033
work page 2010
-
[24]
J. Marklof and A. Str¨ ombergsson, Free path lengths in quasicrystals, Comm. Math. Phys.330(2014), 723–755
work page 2014
-
[25]
J. Marklof and A. Str¨ ombergsson, Kinetic theory for the low-density Lorentz gas, Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. 294(2024)
work page 2024
-
[26]
O. Marmon and P. Vishe, On the Hasse principle for quartic hypersurfaces, Duke Math. J.168(2019), 2727–2799
work page 2019
-
[27]
D. W. Morris,Ratner’s theorems on unipotent flows, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL, 2005
work page 2005
-
[28]
M. Palmer and A. Str¨ ombergsson, The Boltzmann-Grad limit of the Lorentz gas in a union of lattices, Comm. Math. Phys.405(2024), 103 pp
work page 2024
-
[29]
Ratner, On Raghunathan’s measure conjecture, Ann
M. Ratner, On Raghunathan’s measure conjecture, Ann. of Math.134(1991), 545–607
work page 1991
-
[30]
Ratner, Raghunathan’s topological conjecture and distributions of unipotent flows, Duke Math
M. Ratner, Raghunathan’s topological conjecture and distributions of unipotent flows, Duke Math. J.63 (1991), 235–280
work page 1991
-
[31]
W. M. Schmidt, Simultaneous approximation to algebraic numbers by rationals, Acta Math.125(1970), 189–201
work page 1970
-
[32]
N. A. Shah, Limit distributions of expanding translates of certain orbits on homogeneous spaces, Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. (Math. Sci.)106(1996), 105–125
work page 1996
-
[33]
N. A. Shah, Expanding translates of curves and Dirichlet-Minkowski theorem on linear forms, J. Amer. Math. Soc.23(2010), 563–589
work page 2010
-
[34]
Str¨ ombergsson, On the deviation of ergodic averages for horocycle flows, J
A. Str¨ ombergsson, On the deviation of ergodic averages for horocycle flows, J. Mod. Dyn.7(2013), 291– 328
work page 2013
-
[35]
Str¨ ombergsson, An effective Ratner equidistribution result for SL(2,R)⋉R2, Duke Math
A. Str¨ ombergsson, An effective Ratner equidistribution result for SL(2,R)⋉R2, Duke Math. J.164(2015), 843–902
work page 2015
-
[36]
A. Str¨ ombergsson and P. Vishe, An effective equidistribution result for SL(2,R)⋉(R 2)⊕k and application to inhomogeneous quadratic forms, J. Lond. Math. Soc.102(2020), 143–204
work page 2020
-
[37]
D. Sullivan, Disjoint spheres, approximation by imaginary quadratic numbers and the logarithm law for geodesics, Acta Math.149(1982) 215–237
work page 1982
-
[38]
Yang, Effective version of Ratner’s equidistribution theorem for SL(3,R), Ann
L. Yang, Effective version of Ratner’s equidistribution theorem for SL(3,R), Ann. of Math.202(2025), 189–264. Department of Mathematics, Box 480, Uppsala University, SE-75106 Uppsala, Sweden Email address:astrombe@math.uu.se Department of Mathematical Sciences, Chalmers University of Technology and the University of Gothenburg, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Swede...
work page 2025
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.