Baumslag–Gersten Group
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In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory, the Baumslag–Gersten group, also known as the Baumslag group, is a particular one-relator group exhibiting some remarkable properties regarding its finite
quotient group A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
s, its
Dehn function In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory, a Dehn function, named after Max Dehn, is an optimal function associated to a finite group presentation which bounds the ''area'' of a ''relation'' in that group (that is a freely reduced word ...
and the complexity of its word problem. The group is given by the presentation : G=\langle a,t \mid a^=a^2\rangle =\langle a, t \mid (t^a^t) a (t^ at)=a^2 \rangle Here exponential notation for group elements denotes conjugation, that is, g^h=h^gh for g, h\in G.


History

The Baumslag–Gersten group ''G'' was originally introduced in a 1969 paper of Gilbert Baumslag, as an example of a non-
residually finite {{unsourced, date=September 2022 In the mathematical field of group theory, a group ''G'' is residually finite or finitely approximable if for every element ''g'' that is not the identity in ''G'' there is a homomorphism ''h'' from ''G'' to a fini ...
one-relator group with an additional remarkable property that all finite
quotient group A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
s of this group are cyclic. Later, in 1992, Stephen Gersten showed that ''G'', despite being a one-relator group given by a rather simple presentation, has the
Dehn function In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory, a Dehn function, named after Max Dehn, is an optimal function associated to a finite group presentation which bounds the ''area'' of a ''relation'' in that group (that is a freely reduced word ...
growing very quickly, namely faster than any fixed iterate of the exponential function. This example remains the fastest known growth of the Dehn function among one-relator groups. In 2011 Alexei Myasnikov, Alexander Ushakov, and Dong Wook Won proved that ''G'' has the word problem solvable in polynomial time.


Baumslag-Gersten group as an HNN extension

The Baumslag–Gersten group ''G'' can also be realized as an
HNN extension In mathematics, the HNN extension is an important construction of combinatorial group theory. Introduced in a 1949 paper ''Embedding Theorems for Groups'' by Graham Higman, Bernhard Neumann, and Hanna Neumann, it embeds a given group ''G'' into an ...
of the
Baumslag–Solitar group In the mathematical field of group theory, the Baumslag–Solitar groups are examples of two-generator one-relator groups that play an important role in combinatorial group theory and geometric group theory as (counter)examples and test-cases. ...
BS(1,2)=\langle a, b\mid a^b=a^2\rangle with stable letter ''t'' and two cyclic associated subgroups\langle a\rangle, \langle b\rangle : :G=\langle a,t \mid a^=a^2\rangle=\langle a,b,t \mid a^b=a^2, a^t=b\rangle.


Properties of the Baumslag–Gersten group ''G''

*Every finite
quotient group A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
of ''G'' is cyclic. In particular, the group ''G'' is not
residually finite {{unsourced, date=September 2022 In the mathematical field of group theory, a group ''G'' is residually finite or finitely approximable if for every element ''g'' that is not the identity in ''G'' there is a homomorphism ''h'' from ''G'' to a fini ...
. *An endomorphism of ''G'' is either an automorphism or its image is a cyclic subgroup of ''G''. In particular the group ''G'' is Hopfian and co-Hopfian. *The
outer automorphism group In mathematics, the outer automorphism group of a group, , is the quotient, , where is the automorphism group of and ) is the subgroup consisting of inner automorphisms. The outer automorphism group is usually denoted . If is trivial and has a t ...
Out(''G'') of ''G'' is isomorphic to the additive group of dyadic rationals \mathbb Z\left frac\right/math> and in particular is not finitely generated. *Gersten proved that the
Dehn function In the mathematical subject of geometric group theory, a Dehn function, named after Max Dehn, is an optimal function associated to a finite group presentation which bounds the ''area'' of a ''relation'' in that group (that is a freely reduced word ...
''f''(''n'') of ''G'' grows faster than any fixed iterate of the exponential. Subsequently A. N. Platonov proved that ''f(n)'' is equivalent to :: \exp^(1)=(\exp\underbrace_ \exp)(1) *Myasnikov, Ushakov, and Won, using compression methods of ``power circuits" arithmetics, proved that the word problem in ''G'' is solvable in polynomial time. Thus the group ''G'' exhibits a large gap between the growth of its Dehn function and the complexity of its word problem. * The
conjugacy problem In abstract algebra, the conjugacy problem for a group ''G'' with a given presentation is the decision problem of determining, given two words ''x'' and ''y'' in ''G'', whether or not they represent conjugate elements of ''G''. That is, the probl ...
in ''G'' is known to be decidable, but the only known worst-case upper bound estimate for the complexity of the conjugacy problem, due to Janis Beese, is
elementary recursive Elementary may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media Music * ''Elementary'' (Cindy Morgan album), 2001 * ''Elementary'' (The End album), 2007 * ''Elementary'', a Melvin "Wah-Wah Watson" Ragin album, 1977 Other uses in arts, entertainment, an ...
. It is conjectured that this estimate is sharp, based on some reductions to power circuit division problems. There is a strongly generically polynomial time solution of the conjugacy problem for ''G''.


Generalizations

*Andrew Brunner considered one-relator groups of the form :: \langle a,t\mid (a^p)^=a^m \rangle, where p,k,m\ne 0 and generalized many of Baumslag's original results in that context. * Mahan Mitra considered a word-hyperbolic analog ''G'' of the Baumslag–Gersten group, where Mitra's group possesses a rank three free subgroup that is highly distorted in ''G'', namely where the subgroup distortion is higher than any fixed iterated power of the exponential.


See also

* Subgroup distortion


References


External links


Distortion of finitely presented subgroups of non-positively curved groups
the blog of the Spring 2011 Berstein Seminar at Cornell, including van Kampen diagrams demonstrating subgroup distortion in the Baumslag–Gersten group and the discussion of Mitra-like examples {{DEFAULTSORT:Baumslag-Gersten group Geometric group theory Algebraic structures