3,428 research outputs found

    On the regularity conjecture for the cohomology of finite groups

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    Application and implementation of transient algorithms in computer programs

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    A brief introduction is given to the nonlinear finite element programs developed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The four programs are DYNA3D and DYNA2D, which are explicit hydrocodes, and NIKE3D and NIKE2D, which are implicit programs. The main emphasis is on DYNA3D with asides about the other programs. During the past year several new features were added to DYNA3D, and major improvements were made in the computational efficiency of the shell and beam elements. Most of these new features and improvements will eventually make their way into the other programs. The emphasis in the computational mechanics effort was always, and continues to be, efficiency. To get the most out of the supercomputers, all Crays, the programs were vectorized where possible. Several of the more interesting capabilities of DYNA3D will be described and the impact on efficiency will be discussed. Some of the recent work on NIKE3D and NIKE2D will also be presented. In the belief that a single example is worth a thousand equations, the theory is skipped entirely and the examples presented

    Comments on Quakers and the Sacraments

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    The generating hypothesis for the stable module category of a pp-group

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    Freyd's generating hypothesis, interpreted in the stable module category of a finite p-group G, is the statement that a map between finite-dimensional kG-modules factors through a projective if the induced map on Tate cohomology is trivial. We show that Freyd's generating hypothesis holds for a non-trivial finite p-group G if and only if G is either C_2 or C_3. We also give various conditions which are equivalent to the generating hypothesis.Comment: 6 pages, fixed minor typos, to appear in J. Algebr

    Vertex and source determine the block variety of an indecomposable module

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    AbstractThe block variety VG,b(M) of a finitely generated indecomposable module M over the block algebra of a p-block b of a finite group G, introduced in (J. Algebra 215 (1999) 460), can be computed in terms of a vertex and a source of M. We use this to show that VG,b(M) is connected, and that every closed homogeneous subvariety of the affine variety VG,b defined by block cohomology H*(G,b) (cf. Algebras Rep. Theory 2 (1999) 107) is the variety of a module over the block algebra. This is analogous to the corresponding statements on Carlson's cohomology varieties in (Invent. Math. 77 (1984) 291)

    The essential ideal in group cohomology does not square to zero

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    Let G be the Sylow 2-subgroup of the unitary group SU3(4)SU_3(4). We find two essential classes in the mod-2 cohomology ring of G whose product is nonzero. In fact, the product is the ``last survivor'' of Benson-Carlson duality. Recent work of Pakianathan and Yalcin then implies a result about connected graphs with an action of G. Also, there exist essential classes which cannot be written as sums of transfers from proper subgroups. This phenomenon was first observed on the computer. The argument given here uses the elegant calculation by J. Clark, with minor corrections.Comment: 9 pages; three typos corrected, one was particularly confusin
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