The BNSR-invariants of the Stein group 𝐹2,3

2021 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Spahn ◽  
Matthew C. B. Zaremsky

Abstract The Stein group F 2 , 3 F_{2,3} is the group of orientation-preserving piecewise linear homeomorphisms of the unit interval with slopes of the form 2 p ⁢ 3 q 2^{p}3^{q} ( p , q ∈ Z p,q\in\mathbb{Z} ) and breakpoints in Z ⁢ [ 1 6 ] \mathbb{Z}[\frac{1}{6}] . This is a natural relative of Thompson’s group 𝐹. In this paper, we compute the Bieri–Neumann–Strebel–Renz (BNSR) invariants Σ m ⁢ ( F 2 , 3 ) \Sigma^{m}(F_{2,3}) of the Stein group for all m ∈ N m\in\mathbb{N} . A consequence of our computation is that (as with 𝐹) every finitely presented normal subgroup of F 2 , 3 F_{2,3} is of type F ∞ \operatorname{F}_{\infty} . Another, more surprising, consequence is that (unlike 𝐹) the kernel of any map F 2 , 3 → Z F_{2,3}\to\mathbb{Z} is of type F ∞ \operatorname{F}_{\infty} , even though there exist maps F 2 , 3 → Z 2 F_{2,3}\to\mathbb{Z}^{2} whose kernels are not even finitely generated. In terms of BNSR-invariants, this means that every discrete character lies in Σ ∞ ⁢ ( F 2 , 3 ) \Sigma^{\infty}(F_{2,3}) , but there exist (non-discrete) characters that do not even lie in Σ 1 ⁢ ( F 2 , 3 ) \Sigma^{1}(F_{2,3}) . To the best of our knowledge, F 2 , 3 F_{2,3} is the first group whose BNSR-invariants are known exhibiting these properties.

2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
J. R. J. Groves ◽  
Ralph Strebel

Abstract.We show that every finitely generated nilpotent group of class 2 occurs as the quotient of a finitely presented abelian-by-nilpotent group by its largest nilpotent normal subgroup.


2011 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 335-344
Author(s):  
MUSTAFA GÖKHAN BENLI

AbstractIn this paper we look at presentations of subgroups of finitely presented groups with infinite cyclic quotients. We prove that if H is a finitely generated normal subgroup of a finitely presented group G with G/H cyclic, then H has ascending finite endomorphic presentation. It follows that any finitely presented indicable group without free semigroups has the structure of a semidirect product H ⋊ ℤ, where H has finite ascending endomorphic presentation.


2012 ◽  
Vol 14 (03) ◽  
pp. 1250017 ◽  
Author(s):  
LEONARDO CABRER ◽  
DANIELE MUNDICI

An ℓ-groupG is an abelian group equipped with a translation invariant lattice-order. Baker and Beynon proved that G is finitely generated projective if and only if it is finitely presented. A unital ℓ-group is an ℓ-group G with a distinguished order unit, i.e. an element 0 ≤ u ∈ G whose positive integer multiples eventually dominate every element of G. Unital ℓ-homomorphisms between unital ℓ-groups are group homomorphisms that also preserve the order unit and the lattice structure. A unital ℓ-group (G, u) is projective if whenever ψ : (A, a) → (B, b) is a surjective unital ℓ-homomorphism and ϕ : (G, u) → (B, b) is a unital ℓ-homomorphism, there is a unital ℓ-homomorphism θ : (G, u) → (A, a) such that ϕ = ψ ◦ θ. While every finitely generated projective unital ℓ-group is finitely presented, the converse does not hold in general. Classical algebraic topology (à la Whitehead) is combined in this paper with the Włodarczyk–Morelli solution of the weak Oda conjecture for toric varieties, to describe finitely generated projective unital ℓ-groups.


2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (10) ◽  
pp. 1750187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karima Alaoui Ismaili ◽  
David E. Dobbs ◽  
Najib Mahdou

Recently, Xiang and Ouyang defined a (commutative unital) ring [Formula: see text] to be Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent if each finitely generated ideal of [Formula: see text] that is contained in Nil[Formula: see text] is a finitely presented [Formula: see text]-module. We define and study Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent modules and special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent modules over any ring. These properties are characterized and their basic properties are established. Any coherent ring is a special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent ring and any special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent ring is a Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent ring, but neither of these statements has a valid converse. Any reduced ring is a special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent ring (regardless of whether it is coherent). Several examples of Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent rings that are not special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent rings are obtained as byproducts of our study of the transfer of the Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent and the special Nil[Formula: see text]-coherent properties to trivial ring extensions and amalgamated algebras.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (01) ◽  
pp. 61-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Matczak ◽  
A. Mućka ◽  
A. B. Romanowska

This paper is a direct continuation of the paper “Duality for dyadic intervals” by the same authors, and can be considered as its second part. Dyadic rationals are rationals whose denominator is a power of 2. Dyadic triangles and dyadic polygons are, respectively, defined as the intersections with the dyadic plane of a triangle or polygon in the real plane whose vertices lie in the dyadic plane. The one-dimensional analogues are dyadic intervals. Algebraically, dyadic polygons carry the structure of a commutative, entropic and idempotent groupoid under the binary operation of arithmetic mean. The first paper dealt with the structure of finitely generated subgroupoids of the dyadic line, which were shown to be isomorphic to dyadic intervals. Then a duality between the class of dyadic intervals and the class of certain subgroupoids of the dyadic unit square was described. The present paper extends the results of the first paper, provides some characterizations of dyadic triangles, and describes a duality for the class of dyadic triangles. As in the case of intervals, the duality is given by an infinite dualizing (schizophrenic) object, the dyadic unit interval. The dual spaces are certain subgroupoids of the dyadic unit cube, considered as (commutative, idempotent and entropic) groupoids with additional constant operations.


1999 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 481-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Ayik ◽  
N. Ruškuc

In this paper we consider finite generation and finite presentability of Rees matrix semigroups (with or without zero) over arbitrary semigroups. The main result states that a Rees matrix semigroup M[S; I, J; P] is finitely generated (respectively, finitely presented) if and only if S is finitely generated (respectively, finitely presented), and the sets I, J and S\U are finite, where U is the ideal of S generated by the entries of P.


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