There is a vast literature on growth rates, leading up to Gromov's theorem. An earlier result of Joseph A. Wolf showed that if G is a finitely generated nilpotent group, then the group has polynomial growth. Yves Guivarc'h and independently Hyman Bass computed the exact order of polynomial growth. Let G be a finitely generated nilpotent group with lower central series In particular, the quotient groupGk/Gk+1 is a finitely generated abelian group. The Bass-Guivarc'h formula states that the order of polynomial growth of G is where: In particular, Gromov's theorem and the Bass-Guivarch formula imply that the order of polynomial growth of a finitely generated group is always either an integer or infinity. Another nice application of Gromov's theorem and the Bass-Guivarch formula is to the quasi-isometric rigidity of finitely generated abelian groups: any group which is quasi-isometric to a finitely generated abelian group contains a free abelian group of finite index.
Proofs of Gromov's theorem
In order to prove this theorem Gromov introduced a convergence for metric spaces. This convergence, now called the Gromov-Hausdorff convergence, is currently widely used in geometry. A relatively simple proof of the theorem was found by Bruce Kleiner. Later, Terence Tao and Yehuda Shalom modified Kleiner's proof to make an essentially elementary proof as well as a version of the theorem with explicit bounds. Gromov's theorem also follows from the classification of approximate groups obtained by Breuillard, Green and Tao. A simple and concise proof based on functional analytic methods is given by Ozawa.
The gap conjecture
Beyond Gromov's theorem one can ask whether there exists a gap in the growth spectrum for finitely generated group just above polynomial growth, separating virtually nilpotent groups from others. Formally, this means that there would exist a function such that a finitely generated group is virtually nilpotent if and only if its growth function is an. Such a theorem was obtained by Shalom and Tao, with an explicit function for some. The only known groups with growth functions both superpolynomial and subexponential all have growth type of the form, with. Motivated by this it is natural to ask whether there are groups with growth type both superpolynomial and dominated by. This is known as the Gap conjecture.