4,262 research outputs found
Seifert fibred knot manifolds
We consider the question of when is the closed manifold obtained by
elementary surgery on an -knot Seifert fibred over a 2-orbifold. After some
observations on the classical case, we concentrate on the cases n=2 and 3. We
have found a new family of 2-knots with torsion-free, solvable group,
overlooked in earlier work. We know of no higher dimensional examples.Comment: New co-author, stronger restrictions on possible Seifert bases. Final
section on 3-knots reduced to a paragraph, as a lemma was misused in the
original version. Version 3; minor improvements to first paragraph and
notatio
On the local-indicability cohenâlyndon theorem
For a group H and a subset X of H, we let HX denote the set {hxh?1 | h ? H, x ? X}, and when X is a free-generating set of H, we say that the set HX is a Whitehead subset of H. For a group F and an element r of F, we say that r is CohenâLyndon aspherical in F if F{r} is a Whitehead subset of the subgroup of F that is generated by F{r}. In 1963, Cohen and Lyndon (D. E. Cohen and R. C. Lyndon, Free bases for normal subgroups of free groups, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 108 (1963), 526â537) independently showed that in each free group each non-trivial element is CohenâLyndon aspherical. Their proof used the celebrated induction method devised by Magnus in 1930 to study one-relator groups. In 1987, Edjvet and Howie (M. Edjvet and J. Howie, A CohenâLyndon theorem for free products of locally indicable groups, J. Pure Appl. Algebra 45 (1987), 41â44) showed that if A and B are locally indicable groups, then each cyclically reduced element of A*B that does not lie in A ? B is CohenâLyndon aspherical in A*B. Their proof used the original CohenâLyndon theorem. Using BassâSerre theory, the original CohenâLyndon theorem and the EdjvetâHowie theorem, one can deduce the local-indicability CohenâLyndon theorem: if F is a locally indicable group and T is an F-tree with trivial edge stabilisers, then each element of F that fixes no vertex of T is CohenâLyndon aspherical in F. Conversely, by BassâSerre theory, the original CohenâLyndon theorem and the EdjvetâHowie theorem are immediate consequences of the local-indicability CohenâLyndon theorem. In this paper we give a detailed review of a BassâSerre theoretical form of Howie induction and arrange the arguments of Edjvet and Howie into a Howie-inductive proof of the local-indicability CohenâLyndon theorem that uses neither Magnus induction nor the original CohenâLyndon theorem. We conclude with a review of some standard applications of CohenâLyndon asphericit
Finite complete rewriting systems for regular semigroups
It is proved that, given a (von Neumann) regular semigroup with finitely many
left and right ideals, if every maximal subgroup is presentable by a finite
complete rewriting system, then so is the semigroup. To achieve this, the
following two results are proved: the property of being defined by a finite
complete rewriting system is preserved when taking an ideal extension by a
semigroup defined by a finite complete rewriting system; a completely 0-simple
semigroup with finitely many left and right ideals admits a presentation by a
finite complete rewriting system provided all of its maximal subgroups do.Comment: 11 page
Mapping the potential within a nanoscale undoped GaAs region using a scanning electron microscope
Semiconductor dopant profiling using secondary electron imaging in a scanning
electron microscope (SEM) has been developed in recent years. In this paper, we
show that the mechanism behind it also allows mapping of the electric potential
of undoped regions. By using an unbiased GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure, this
article demonstrates the direct observation of the electrostatic potential
variation inside a 90nm wide undoped GaAs channel surrounded by ionized
dopants. The secondary electron emission intensities are compared with
two-dimensional numerical solutions of the electric potential.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Young's experiment and the finiteness of information
Young's experiment is the quintessential quantum experiment. It is argued
here that quantum interference is a consequence of the finiteness of
information. The observer has the choice whether that information manifests
itself as path information or in the interference pattern or in both partially
to the extent defined by the finiteness of information.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, typos remove
One Relator Quotients of Graph Products
In this paper, we generalise Magnus' Freiheitssatz and solution to the word
problem for one-relator groups by considering one relator quotients of certain
classes of right-angled Artin groups and graph products of locally indicable
polycyclic groups
The structure of one-relator relative presentations and their centres
Suppose that G is a nontrivial torsion-free group and w is a word in the
alphabet G\cup\{x_1^{\pm1},...,x_n^{\pm1}\} such that the word w' obtained from
w by erasing all letters belonging to G is not a proper power in the free group
F(x_1,...,x_n). We show how to reduce the study of the relative presentation
\^G= to the case n=1. It turns out that an
"n-variable" group \^G can be constructed from similar "one-variable" groups
using an explicit construction similar to wreath product. As an illustration,
we prove that, for n>1, the centre of \^G is always trivial. For n=1, the
centre of \^G is also almost always trivial; there are several exceptions, and
all of them are known.Comment: 15 pages. A Russian version of this paper is at
http://mech.math.msu.su/department/algebra/staff/klyachko/papers.htm . V4:
the intoduction is rewritten; Section 1 is extended; a short introduction to
Secton 5 is added; some misprints are corrected and some cosmetic
improvements are mad
Arterial occlusion: a radiological study of a series of patients with peripheral, arterial disease
An unselected series of 546 patients, on whom
946 arteriograms were performed is considered.1250 complete arterial occlusions were found.
The incidence was 2.3 per patient, both in
men and in women.It is suggested that the sex distribution of
peripheral vascular disease in a population
is more accurately indicated by the findings
in gangrene and pregangrene where there are
2.3 and 2 men, respectively to 1 woman, than
by those in intermittent claudication
where the sex ratio is 4.8 men to 1 woman,Aortographic evidence is presented to suggest
that aortic occlusion may originate directly
in the aorta itself, in women, more commonly
than previously believed.On the symptomatic side occlusion in the
femoro -popliteal segment alone occurs
in only 43.5% of the occluded symptomatic limbs
in men, and in only 34.6% of those in women.Femoro-popliteal occlusion with leg artery
occlusion occurs in 43.2% of the occluded
symptomatic limbs in men, and in 40.7% of those
in women.Leg artery occlusion alone occurs in 13.3%
of the occluded symptomatic limbs in men,
and in 24.7% of those in women.On the asymptomatic side femoro-popliteal
artery occlusion alone occurs in 19.8% of the
occluded limbs of men and in 9.7% in women.
Femoro -popliteal occlusions with associated
leg artery occlusion occurs in 20.7% of the
occluded asymptomatic limbs in men, and in
25.8% of those in women. Leg artery occlusion
alone occurs in 59.5% of the occluded
asymptomatic limbs in men and in 64.5% of those
in women.The patterns of occlusion in the lower limbs
are recorded. The commonest pattern is
occlusion of the superficial femoral artery alone,
in both women and men. Second most common
is occlusion of the anterior tibial artery
alone in men, and of the posterior tibial
artery alone in women,The occlusion patterns in men and women are
considered in intermittent claudication,
gangrene and pregangrene.Patients with complete occlusion in the aortoiliac group are younger than those with
complete occlusion in the femoro-popliteal
group.The patients with complete occlusion in the
femoro-popliteal group are older than those
without complete occlusion. In the aortoiliac group those with complete occlusion are
younger than those without,The incidence of leg artery occlusion is the
same in the symptomatic and asymptomatic limbs
in intermittent claudication.It is suggested that there is evidence that
the first artery to show complete occlusion in
the lower limb tends to be a leg artery.The incidence of complete occlusion is higher
in limbs in patients with unilateral symptoms,
than in those with bilateral symptoms.The peak incidence of occlusion in the
femoro-popliteal segment in women is more
proximal in the adductor canal than in men.The femoro-popliteal occlusions in the limbs with
leg artery occlusion are longer than in those
without, and show a greater tendency to
popliteal artery involvement.The occlusions in the symptomatic and
asymptomatic limbs are considered. They are,
very broadly, similar in their histographic
appearances
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