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Let $H\le F$ be two finitely generated free groups. Given $g\in F$, we study the ideal $\mathfrak I_g$ of equations for g with coefficients in H, i.e. the elements $w(x)\in H*\langle x\rangle$ such that $w(g)=1$ in F. The ideal $\mathfrak I_g$ is a normal subgroup of $H*\langle x\rangle$, and it’s possible to algorithmically compute a finite normal generating set for $\mathfrak I_g$; we give a description of one such algorithm, based on Stallings folding operations. We provide an algorithm to find an equation in w(x)\in$\mathfrak I_g$ with minimum degree, i.e. such that its cyclic reduction contains the minimum possible number of occurrences of x and x−1; this answers a question of A. Rosenmann and E. Ventura. More generally, we show how to algorithmically compute the set Dg of all integers d such that $\mathfrak I_g$ contains equations of degree d; we show that Dg coincides, up to a finite set, with either $\mathbb N$ or $2\mathbb N$. Finally, we provide examples to illustrate the techniques introduced in this paper. We discuss the case where ${\text{rank}}(H)=1$. We prove that both kinds of sets Dg can actually occur. We show that the equations of minimum possible degree aren’t in general enough to generate the whole ideal $\mathfrak I_g$ as a normal subgroup.
The main result includes as special cases on the one hand, the Gerstenhaber–Rothaus theorem (1962) and its generalisation due to Nitsche and Thom (2022) and, on the other hand, the Brodskii–Howie–Short theorem (1980–1984) generalising Magnus’s Freiheitssatz (1930).
In this paper we generalize techniques used by Klyachko and the authors to prove some tessellation results about S2. These results are applied to prove the solvability of certain equations with torsion-free coefficients.
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