Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Gracefulness, group sequencings and graph factorizations
- Orbits in finite group actions
- Groups with finitely generated integral homologies
- Invariants of discrete groups, Lie algebras and pro-p groups
- Groups with all non-subnormal subgroups of finite rank
- On some infinite dimensional linear groups
- Groups and semisymmetric graphs
- On the covers of finite groups
- Groupland
- On maximal nilpotent π-subgroups
- Characters of p-groups and Sylow p-subgroups
- On the relation between group theory and loop theory
- Groups and lattices
- Finite generalized tetrahedron groups with a cubic relator
- Character degrees of the Sylow p-subgroups of classical groups
- Character correspondences and perfect isometries
- The characters of finite projective symplectic group PSp(4, q)
- Exponent of finite groups with automorphisms
- Classifying irreducible representations in characteristic zero
- Lie methods in group theory
- Chevalley groups of type G2 as automorphism groups of loops
Invariants of discrete groups, Lie algebras and pro-p groups
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Gracefulness, group sequencings and graph factorizations
- Orbits in finite group actions
- Groups with finitely generated integral homologies
- Invariants of discrete groups, Lie algebras and pro-p groups
- Groups with all non-subnormal subgroups of finite rank
- On some infinite dimensional linear groups
- Groups and semisymmetric graphs
- On the covers of finite groups
- Groupland
- On maximal nilpotent π-subgroups
- Characters of p-groups and Sylow p-subgroups
- On the relation between group theory and loop theory
- Groups and lattices
- Finite generalized tetrahedron groups with a cubic relator
- Character degrees of the Sylow p-subgroups of classical groups
- Character correspondences and perfect isometries
- The characters of finite projective symplectic group PSp(4, q)
- Exponent of finite groups with automorphisms
- Classifying irreducible representations in characteristic zero
- Lie methods in group theory
- Chevalley groups of type G2 as automorphism groups of loops
Summary
Introduction
The first geometric invariant of groups was introduced by R. Bieri and R. Strebel for the special class of finitely generated metabelian groups [20]. Their work was motivated by an earlier result that every finitely presented soluble group with infinite cyclic quotient is an ascending HNN-extension with stable letter corresponding to a generator of the cyclic quotient and a finitely generated base [22]. It turned out that the new geometric invariant classifies the finitely presented groups in the class of all finitely generated metabelian groups [20]. Later on the definition of Bieri-Strebel was generalised for any finitely generated discrete group [18] and higher dimensional homological and homotopical analogues of this invariant were introduced by R. Bieri and B. Renz [19], [64]. We will discuss the precise definitions of these invariants in the following section. They are important as they determine the homological and homotopical types FPm and Fm of subgroups containing the derived subgroup.
In general the geometric invariants are very hard to compute and there are very few cases when they are calculated. One of them is the class of right angled Artin groups [48] which gave the first known examples of groups of type F P∞ which are not finitely presented [7]. Even in the class of metabelian groups the structure of the geometric invariants is not completely understood. There are two open conjectures in the metabelian case: the FPm-Conjecture and the Σm-Conjecture.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Groups St Andrews 2001 in Oxford , pp. 344 - 365Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003