In the mathematical theory of Kleinian groups, Jørgensen's inequality is an inequality involving the traces of elements of a Kleinian group, proved by Troels Jørgensen (1976).
[1] The inequality states that if A and B generate a non-elementary discrete subgroup of the SL2(C), then The inequality gives a quantitative estimate of the discreteness of the group: many of the standard corollaries bound elements of the group away from the identity.
denotes the usual norm on SL2(C).
[2] Another consequence in the parabolic case is the existence of cusp neighborhoods in hyperbolic 3-manifolds: if G is a Kleinian group and j is a parabolic element of G with fixed point w, then there is a horoball based at w which projects to a cusp neighborhood in the quotient space
Jørgensen's inequality is used to prove that every element of G which does not have a fixed point at w moves the horoball entirely off itself and so does not affect the local geometry of the quotient at w; intuitively, the geometry is entirely determined by the parabolic element.