When G is a Lie group one can define an arithmetic lattice in G as follows: for any algebraic group \mathrm G defined over \Q such that there is a morphism \mathrm G(\R) \to G with compact kernel, the image of an arithmetic subgroup in \mathrm G(\Q) is an arithmetic lattice in G. Thus, for example, if G = \mathrm G(\R) and G is a subgroup of \mathrm{GL}_n then G \cap \mathrm{GL}_n(\Z) is an arithmetic lattice in G (but there are many more, corresponding to other embeddings); for instance, \mathrm{SL}_n(\Z) is an arithmetic lattice in \mathrm{SL}_n(\R ).
The Borel–Harish-Chandra theorem A
lattice in a Lie group is usually defined as a discrete subgroup with finite covolume. The terminology introduced above is coherent with this, as a theorem due to Borel and Harish-Chandra states that an arithmetic subgroup in a semisimple Lie group is of finite covolume (the discreteness is obvious). The theorem is more precise: it says that the arithmetic lattice is
cocompact if and only if the "form" of G used to define it (i.e. the \Q -group \mathrm G) is anisotropic. For example, the arithmetic lattice associated to a quadratic form in n variables over \Q will be co-compact in the associated orthogonal group if and only if the quadratic form does not vanish at any point in \Q^n \setminus \{ 0\}.
Margulis arithmeticity theorem The spectacular result that Margulis obtained is a partial converse to the Borel—Harish-Chandra theorem: for certain Lie groups
any lattice is arithmetic. This result is true for all irreducible lattices in semisimple Lie groups of real rank larger than two. For example, all lattices in \mathrm{SL}_n(\R ) are arithmetic when n \ge 3. The main new ingredient that Margulis used to prove his theorem was the
superrigidity of lattices in higher-rank groups that he proved for this purpose. Irreducibility only plays a role when G has a factor of real rank one (otherwise the theorem always holds) and is not simple: it means that for any product decomposition G = G_1\times G_2 the lattice is not commensurable to a product of lattices in each of the factors G_i. For example, the lattice \mathrm{SL}_2(\Z [\sqrt 2]) in \mathrm{SL}_2(\R) \times \mathrm{SL}_2(\R) is irreducible, while \mathrm{SL}_2(\Z) \times \mathrm{SL}_2(\Z) is not. The Margulis arithmeticity (and superrigidity) theorem holds for certain rank 1 Lie groups, namely \mathrm{Sp}(n,1) for n \geqslant 1 and the exceptional group F_4^{-20}. It is known not to hold in all groups \mathrm{SO}(n,1) for n \geqslant 2 (ref to GPS) and for \mathrm{SU}(n, 1) when n = 1,2,3. There are no known non-arithmetic lattices in the groups \mathrm{SU}(n,1) when n \geqslant 4.
Arithmetic Fuchsian and Kleinian groups An arithmetic Fuchsian group is constructed from the following data: a
totally real number field F, a
quaternion algebra A over F and an order \mathcal O in A. It is asked that for one embedding \sigma: F \to \R the algebra A^\sigma \otimes_F \R be isomorphic to the matrix algebra M_2(\R) and for all others to the
Hamilton quaternions. Then the group of units \mathcal O^1 is a lattice in (A^\sigma \otimes_F \R)^1 which is isomorphic to \mathrm{SL}_2(\R), and it is co-compact in all cases except when A is the matrix algebra over \Q. All arithmetic lattices in \mathrm{SL}_2(\R) are obtained in this way (up to commensurability). Arithmetic Kleinian groups are constructed similarly except that F is required to have exactly one complex place and A to be the Hamilton quaternions at all real places. They exhaust all arithmetic commensurability classes in \mathrm{SL}_2(\Complex).
Classification For every semisimple Lie group G it is in theory possible to classify (up to commensurability) all arithmetic lattices in G, in a manner similar to the cases G = \mathrm{SL}_2(\R), \mathrm{SL}_2(\Complex) explained above. This amounts to classifying the algebraic groups whose real points are isomorphic up to a compact factor to G.
The congruence subgroup problem A
congruence subgroup is (roughly) a subgroup of an arithmetic group defined by taking all matrices satisfying certain equations modulo an integer, for example the group of 2 by 2 integer matrices with diagonal (respectively off-diagonal) coefficients congruent to 1 (respectively 0) modulo a positive integer. These are always finite-index subgroups and the congruence subgroup problem roughly asks whether all subgroups are obtained in this way. The conjecture (usually attributed to
Jean-Pierre Serre) is that this is true for (irreducible) arithmetic lattices in higher-rank groups and false in rank-one groups. It is still open in this generality but there are many results establishing it for specific lattices (in both its positive and negative cases). == S-arithmetic groups ==