27 research outputs found
The cyclically presented groups with relators xi xi+k xi+l
Continuing Cavicchioli, Repovš, and Spaggiari's investigations into the cyclic presentations 〈x1,...,xn | x ixi+kxi+l D 1 (1 ≤ i ≤ n)〉 we determine when they are aspherical and when they define finite groups; in these cases we describe the groups' structures. In many cases we show that if the group is infinite then it contains a non-abelian free subgroup. © European Mathematical Society
The aspherical Cavicchioli-Hegenbarth-Repovš generalized Fibonacci groups
The Cavicchioli–Hegenbarth–Repovš generalized Fibonacci groups are defined by the presentations Gn (m, k) = 〈x 1, … , xn | xixi+m = xi+k (1 ⩽ i ⩽ n)〉. These cyclically presented groups generalize Conway's Fibonacci groups and the Sieradski groups. Building on a theorem of Bardakov and Vesnin we classify the aspherical presentations Gn (m, k). We determine when Gn (m, k) has infinite abelianization and provide sufficient conditions for Gn (m, k) to be perfect. We conjecture that these are also necessary conditions. Combined with our asphericity theorem, a proof of this conjecture would imply a classification of the finite Cavicchioli–Hegenbarth–Repovš groups
Largeness and SQ-universality of cyclically presented groups
Largeness, SQ-universality, and the existence of free subgroups of rank 2 are measures of the complexity of a finitely presented group. We obtain conditions under which a cyclically presented group possesses one or more of these properties. We apply our results to a class of groups introduced by Prishchepov which contains, amongst others, the various generalizations of Fibonacci groups introduced by Campbell and Robertson
Economical adjunction of square roots to groups
How large must an overgroup of a given group be in order to contain a square
root of any element of the initial group? We give an almost exact answer to
this question (the obtained estimate is at most twice worse than the best
possible) and state several related open questions.Comment: 5 pages. A Russian version of this paper is at
http://mech.math.msu.su/department/algebra/staff/klyachko/papers.htm V2:
minor correction
Free subgroups of one-relator relative presentations
Suppose that G is a nontrivial torsion-free group and w is a word over the
alphabet G\cup\{x_1^{\pm1},...,x_n^{\pm1}\}. It is proved that for n\ge2 the
group \~G= always contains a nonabelian free subgroup.
For n=1 the question about the existence of nonabelian free subgroups in \~G is
answered completely in the unimodular case (i.e., when the exponent sum of x_1
in w is one). Some generalisations of these results are discussed.Comment: V3: A small correction in the last phrase of the proof of Theorem 1.
4 page
Efficient Finite Groups Arising in the Study of Relative Asphericity
We study a class of two-generator two-relator groups, denoted Jn(m, k), that arise in the study of relative asphericity as groups satisfying a transitional curvature condition. Particular instances of these groups occur in the literature as finite groups of intriguing orders. Here we find infinite families of non-elementary virtually free groups and of finite metabelian non-nilpotent groups, for which we determine the orders. All Mersenne primes arise as factors of the orders of the non-metacyclic groups in the class, as do all primes from other conjecturally infinite families of primes. We classify the finite groups up to isomorphism and show that our class overlaps and extends a class of groups Fa,b,c with trivalent Cayley graphs that was introduced by C.M.Campbell, H.S.M.Coxeter, and E.F.Robertson. The theory of cyclically presented groups informs our methods and we extend part of this theory (namely, on connections with polynomial resultants) to ?bicyclically presented groups? that arise naturally in our analysis. As a corollary to our main results we obtain new infinite families of finite metacyclic generalized Fibonacci groups
The concept of 'largeness' in group theory
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