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Presentation of a group

In mathematics, a presentation is one method of specifying a group. A presentation of a group G comprises a set S of generators—so that every element of the group can be written as a product of powers of some of these generators—and a set R of relations among those generators. We then say G has presentation

Informally, G has the above presentation if it is the "freest group" generated by S subject only to the relations R. Formally, the group G is said to have the above presentation if it is isomorphic to the quotient of a free group on S by the normal subgroup generated by the relations R.

As a simple example, the cyclic group of order n has the presentation

where 1 is the group identity. This may be written equivalently as

thanks to the convention that terms that do not include an equals sign are taken to be equal to the group identity. Such terms are called relators, distinguishing them from the relations that do include an equals sign.

Every group has a presentation, and in fact many different presentations; a presentation is often the most compact way of describing the structure of the group.

A closely related but different concept is that of an absolute presentation of a group.

Background

A free group on a set S is a group where each element can be uniquely described as a finite length product of the form:

 

where the si are elements of S, adjacent si are distinct, and ai are non-zero integers (but n may be zero). In less formal terms, the group consists of words in the generators and their inverses, subject only to canceling a generator with an adjacent occurrence of its inverse.

If G is any group, and S is a generating subset of G, then every element of G is also of the above form; but in general, these products will not uniquely describe an element of G.

For example, the dihedral group D8 of order sixteen can be generated by a rotation, r, of order 8; and a flip, f, of order 2; and certainly any element of D8 is a product of r's and f's.

However, we have, for example, rfr = f−1, r7 = r−1, etc., so such products are not unique in D8. Each such product equivalence can be expressed as an equality to the identity, such as

rfrf = 1,
r8 = 1, or
f2 = 1.

Informally, we can consider these products on the left hand side as being elements of the free group F = <r, f>, and can consider the subgroup R of F which is generated by these strings; each of which would also be equivalent to 1 when considered as products in D8.

If we then let N be the subgroup of F generated by all conjugates x−1Rx of R, then it follows by definition that every element of N is a finite product x1−1r1x1 ... xm−1rm xm of members of such conjugates. It follows that each element of N, when considered as a product in D8, will also evaluate to 1; and thus that N is a normal subgroup of F. Thus D8 is isomorphic to the quotient group F/N. We then say that D8 has presentation

 

Here the set of generators is S = {r, f }, and the set of relations is R = {r 8 = 1, f 2 = 1, (rf )2 = 1}. We often see R abbreviated, giving the presentation

 

An even shorter form drops the equality and identity signs, to list just the set of relators, which is {r 8, f 2, (rf )2}. Doing this gives the presentation

 

All three presentations are equivalent.

Notation

Although the notation S | R used in this article for a presentation is now the most common, earlier writers used different variations on the same format. Such notations include the following:[citation needed]

  • S | R
  • (S | R)
  • {S; R}
  • S; R

Definition

Let S be a set and let FS be the free group on S. Let R be a set of words on S, so R naturally gives a subset of  . To form a group with presentation  , take the quotient of   by the smallest normal subgroup that contains each element of R. (This subgroup is called the normal closure N of R in  .) The group   is then defined as the quotient group

 

The elements of S are called the generators of   and the elements of R are called the relators. A group G is said to have the presentation   if G is isomorphic to  .[1]

It is a common practice to write relators in the form   where x and y are words on S. What this means is that  . This has the intuitive meaning that the images of x and y are supposed to be equal in the quotient group. Thus, for example, rn in the list of relators is equivalent with  .[1]

For a finite group G, it is possible to build a presentation of G from the group multiplication table, as follows. Take S to be the set elements   of G and R to be all words of the form  , where   is an entry in the multiplication table.

Alternate definition

The definition of group presentation may alternatively be recast in terms of equivalence classes of words on the alphabet  . In this perspective, we declare two words to be equivalent if it is possible to get from one to the other by a sequence of moves, where each move consists of adding or removing a consecutive pair   or   for some x in S, or by adding or removing a consecutive copy of a relator. The group elements are the equivalence classes, and the group operation is concatenation.[1]

This point of view is particularly common in the field of combinatorial group theory.

Finitely presented groups

A presentation is said to be finitely generated if S is finite and finitely related if R is finite. If both are finite it is said to be a finite presentation. A group is finitely generated (respectively finitely related, finitely presented) if it has a presentation that is finitely generated (respectively finitely related, a finite presentation). A group which has a finite presentation with a single relation is called a one-relator group.

Recursively presented groups

If S is indexed by a set I consisting of all the natural numbers N or a finite subset of them, then it is easy to set up a simple one to one coding (or Gödel numbering) f : FSN from the free group on S to the natural numbers, such that we can find algorithms that, given f(w), calculate w, and vice versa. We can then call a subset U of FS recursive (respectively recursively enumerable) if f(U) is recursive (respectively recursively enumerable). If S is indexed as above and R recursively enumerable, then the presentation is a recursive presentation and the corresponding group is recursively presented. This usage may seem odd, but it is possible to prove that if a group has a presentation with R recursively enumerable then it has another one with R recursive.

Every finitely presented group is recursively presented, but there are recursively presented groups that cannot be finitely presented. However a theorem of Graham Higman states that a finitely generated group has a recursive presentation if and only if it can be embedded in a finitely presented group.[2] From this we can deduce that there are (up to isomorphism) only countably many finitely generated recursively presented groups. Bernhard Neumann has shown that there are uncountably many non-isomorphic two generator groups. Therefore, there are finitely generated groups that cannot be recursively presented.

History

One of the earliest presentations of a group by generators and relations was given by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1856, in his icosian calculus – a presentation of the icosahedral group.[3] The first systematic study was given by Walther von Dyck, student of Felix Klein, in the early 1880s, laying the foundations for combinatorial group theory.[4]

Examples

The following table lists some examples of presentations for commonly studied groups. Note that in each case there are many other presentations that are possible. The presentation listed is not necessarily the most efficient one possible.

Group Presentation Comments
the free group on S   A free group is "free" in the sense that it is subject to no relations.
Cn, the cyclic group of order n  
Dn, the dihedral group of order 2n   Here r represents a rotation and f a reflection
D, the infinite dihedral group  
Dicn, the dicyclic group   The quaternion group Q8 is a special case when n = 2
Z × Z  
Z/mZ × Z/nZ  
the free abelian group on S   where R is the set of all commutators of elements of S
Sn, the symmetric group on n symbols generators:  
relations:
  •  ,
  •  ,
  •  

The last set of relations can be transformed into

  •  

using  .

Here σi is the permutation that swaps the ith element with the i+1st one. The product σiσi+1 is a 3-cycle on the set {i, i+1, i+2}.
Bn, the braid groups generators:  

relations:

  •  ,
  •  
Note the similarity with the symmetric group; the only difference is the removal of the relation  .
V4 ≅ D2, the Klein 4 group  
T ≅ A4, the tetrahedral group  
O ≅ S4, the octahedral group  
I ≅ A5, the icosahedral group  
Q8, the quaternion group   For an alternative presentation see Dicn above with n=2.
SL(2, Z)   topologically a and b can be visualized as Dehn twists on the torus
GL(2, Z)   nontrivial Z/2Zgroup extension of SL(2, Z)
PSL(2, Z), the modular group   PSL(2, Z) is the free product of the cyclic groups Z/2Z and Z/3Z
Heisenberg group  
BS(m, n), the Baumslag–Solitar groups  
Tits group   [a, b] is the commutator

An example of a finitely generated group that is not finitely presented is the wreath product   of the group of integers with itself.

Some theorems

Theorem. Every group has a presentation.

To see this, given a group G, consider the free group FG on G. By the universal property of free groups, there exists a unique group homomorphism φ : FGG whose restriction to G is the identity map. Let K be the kernel of this homomorphism. Then K is normal in FG, therefore is equal to its normal closure, so G | K⟩ = FG/K. Since the identity map is surjective, φ is also surjective, so by the First Isomorphism Theorem, G | K⟩ ≅ im(φ) = G. This presentation may be highly inefficient if both G and K are much larger than necessary.

Corollary. Every finite group has a finite presentation.

One may take the elements of the group for generators and the Cayley table for relations.

Novikov–Boone theorem

The negative solution to the word problem for groups states that there is a finite presentation S | R for which there is no algorithm which, given two words u, v, decides whether u and v describe the same element in the group. This was shown by Pyotr Novikov in 1955[5] and a different proof was obtained by William Boone in 1958.[6]

Constructions

Suppose G has presentation S | R and H has presentation T | Q with S and T being disjoint. Then

  • the free product GH has presentation S, T | R, Q and
  • the direct product G × H has presentation S, T | R, Q, [S, T]⟩, where [S, T] means that every element from S commutes with every element from T (cf. commutator).

Deficiency

The deficiency of a finite presentation S | R is just |S| − |R| and the deficiency of a finitely presented group G, denoted def(G), is the maximum of the deficiency over all presentations of G. The deficiency of a finite group is non-positive. The Schur multiplicator of a finite group G can be generated by −def(G) generators, and G is efficient if this number is required.[7]

Geometric group theory

A presentation of a group determines a geometry, in the sense of geometric group theory: one has the Cayley graph, which has a metric, called the word metric. These are also two resulting orders, the weak order and the Bruhat order, and corresponding Hasse diagrams. An important example is in the Coxeter groups.

Further, some properties of this graph (the coarse geometry) are intrinsic, meaning independent of choice of generators.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Peifer, David (1997). "An Introduction to Combinatorial Group Theory and the Word Problem". Mathematics Magazine. 70 (1): 3–10. doi:10.1080/0025570X.1997.11996491.
  2. ^ "Subgroups of finitely presented groups". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 262 (1311): 455–475. 1961-08-08. doi:10.1098/rspa.1961.0132. ISSN 0080-4630.
  3. ^ Sir William Rowan Hamilton (1856). "Memorandum respecting a new System of Roots of Unity" (PDF). Philosophical Magazine. 12: 446.
  4. ^ Stillwell, John (2002). Mathematics and its history. Springer. p. 374. ISBN 978-0-387-95336-6.
  5. ^ Novikov, Pyotr S. (1955), "On the algorithmic unsolvability of the word problem in group theory", Proceedings of the Steklov Institute of Mathematics (in Russian), 44: 1–143, Zbl 0068.01301
  6. ^ Boone, William W. (1958), "The word problem" (PDF), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 44 (10): 1061–1065, Bibcode:1958PNAS...44.1061B, doi:10.1073/pnas.44.10.1061, PMC 528693, PMID 16590307, Zbl 0086.24701
  7. ^ Johnson, D.L.; Robertson, E.L. (1979). "Finite groups of deficiency zero". In Wall, C.T.C. (ed.). Homological Group Theory. London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series. Vol. 36. Cambridge University Press. pp. 275–289. ISBN 0-521-22729-1. Zbl 0423.20029.

References

  • Coxeter, H. S. M.; Moser, W. O. J. (1980). Generators and Relations for Discrete Groups. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-09212-9. ― This useful reference has tables of presentations of all small finite groups, the reflection groups, and so forth.
  • Johnson, D. L. (1997). Presentations of Groups (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58542-2. ― Schreier's method, Nielsen's method, free presentations, subgroups and HNN extensions, Golod–Shafarevich theorem, etc.
  • Sims, Charles C. (1994). Computation with Finitely Presented Groups (1st ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-13507-8. ― fundamental algorithms from theoretical computer science, computational number theory, and computational commutative algebra, etc.

External links

  • de Cornulier, Yves. "Group Presentation". MathWorld.
  • Small groups and their presentations on GroupNames

presentation, group, confused, with, group, representation, this, article, about, specifying, generators, relations, group, describing, module, over, ring, free, presentation, mathematics, presentation, method, specifying, group, presentation, group, comprises. Not to be confused with Group representation This article is about specifying generators and relations of a group For describing a module over a ring see free presentation In mathematics a presentation is one method of specifying a group A presentation of a group G comprises a set S of generators so that every element of the group can be written as a product of powers of some of these generators and a set R of relations among those generators We then say G has presentation S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle Informally G has the above presentation if it is the freest group generated by S subject only to the relations R Formally the group G is said to have the above presentation if it is isomorphic to the quotient of a free group on S by the normal subgroup generated by the relations R As a simple example the cyclic group of order n has the presentation a a n 1 displaystyle langle a mid a n 1 rangle where 1 is the group identity This may be written equivalently as a a n displaystyle langle a mid a n rangle thanks to the convention that terms that do not include an equals sign are taken to be equal to the group identity Such terms are called relators distinguishing them from the relations that do include an equals sign Every group has a presentation and in fact many different presentations a presentation is often the most compact way of describing the structure of the group A closely related but different concept is that of an absolute presentation of a group Contents 1 Background 2 Notation 3 Definition 3 1 Alternate definition 4 Finitely presented groups 5 Recursively presented groups 6 History 7 Examples 8 Some theorems 8 1 Novikov Boone theorem 9 Constructions 10 Deficiency 11 Geometric group theory 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksBackground EditA free group on a set S is a group where each element can be uniquely described as a finite length product of the form s 1 a 1 s 2 a 2 s n a n displaystyle s 1 a 1 s 2 a 2 cdots s n a n where the si are elements of S adjacent si are distinct and ai are non zero integers but n may be zero In less formal terms the group consists of words in the generators and their inverses subject only to canceling a generator with an adjacent occurrence of its inverse If G is any group and S is a generating subset of G then every element of G is also of the above form but in general these products will not uniquely describe an element of G For example the dihedral group D8 of order sixteen can be generated by a rotation r of order 8 and a flip f of order 2 and certainly any element of D8 is a product of r s and f s However we have for example rfr f 1 r7 r 1 etc so such products are not unique in D8 Each such product equivalence can be expressed as an equality to the identity such as rfrf 1 r8 1 or f 2 1 Informally we can consider these products on the left hand side as being elements of the free group F lt r f gt and can consider the subgroup R of F which is generated by these strings each of which would also be equivalent to 1 when considered as products in D8 If we then let N be the subgroup of F generated by all conjugates x 1Rx of R then it follows by definition that every element of N is a finite product x1 1r1x1 xm 1rm xm of members of such conjugates It follows that each element of N when considered as a product in D8 will also evaluate to 1 and thus that N is a normal subgroup of F Thus D8 is isomorphic to the quotient group F N We then say that D8 has presentation r f r 8 1 f 2 1 r f 2 1 displaystyle langle r f mid r 8 1 f 2 1 rf 2 1 rangle Here the set of generators is S r f and the set of relations is R r 8 1 f 2 1 rf 2 1 We often see R abbreviated giving the presentation r f r 8 f 2 r f 2 1 displaystyle langle r f mid r 8 f 2 rf 2 1 rangle An even shorter form drops the equality and identity signs to list just the set of relators which is r 8 f 2 rf 2 Doing this gives the presentation r f r 8 f 2 r f 2 displaystyle langle r f mid r 8 f 2 rf 2 rangle All three presentations are equivalent Notation EditAlthough the notation S R used in this article for a presentation is now the most common earlier writers used different variations on the same format Such notations include the following citation needed S R S R S R S R Definition Edit Relator redirects here For other uses see Relator disambiguation Let S be a set and let FS be the free group on S Let R be a set of words on S so R naturally gives a subset of F S displaystyle F S To form a group with presentation S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle take the quotient of F S displaystyle F S by the smallest normal subgroup that contains each element of R This subgroup is called the normal closure N of R in F S displaystyle F S The group S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle is then defined as the quotient group S R F S N displaystyle langle S mid R rangle F S N The elements of S are called the generators of S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle and the elements of R are called the relators A group G is said to have the presentation S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle if G is isomorphic to S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle 1 It is a common practice to write relators in the form x y displaystyle x y where x and y are words on S What this means is that y 1 x R displaystyle y 1 x in R This has the intuitive meaning that the images of x and y are supposed to be equal in the quotient group Thus for example rn in the list of relators is equivalent with r n 1 displaystyle r n 1 1 For a finite group G it is possible to build a presentation of G from the group multiplication table as follows Take S to be the set elements g i displaystyle g i of G and R to be all words of the form g i g j g k 1 displaystyle g i g j g k 1 where g i g j g k displaystyle g i g j g k is an entry in the multiplication table Alternate definition Edit The definition of group presentation may alternatively be recast in terms of equivalence classes of words on the alphabet S S 1 displaystyle S cup S 1 In this perspective we declare two words to be equivalent if it is possible to get from one to the other by a sequence of moves where each move consists of adding or removing a consecutive pair x x 1 displaystyle xx 1 or x 1 x displaystyle x 1 x for some x in S or by adding or removing a consecutive copy of a relator The group elements are the equivalence classes and the group operation is concatenation 1 This point of view is particularly common in the field of combinatorial group theory Finitely presented groups EditA presentation is said to be finitely generated if S is finite and finitely related if R is finite If both are finite it is said to be a finite presentation A group is finitely generated respectively finitely related finitely presented if it has a presentation that is finitely generated respectively finitely related a finite presentation A group which has a finite presentation with a single relation is called a one relator group Recursively presented groups EditIf S is indexed by a set I consisting of all the natural numbers N or a finite subset of them then it is easy to set up a simple one to one coding or Godel numbering f FS N from the free group on S to the natural numbers such that we can find algorithms that given f w calculate w and vice versa We can then call a subset U of FS recursive respectively recursively enumerable if f U is recursive respectively recursively enumerable If S is indexed as above and R recursively enumerable then the presentation is a recursive presentation and the corresponding group is recursively presented This usage may seem odd but it is possible to prove that if a group has a presentation with R recursively enumerable then it has another one with R recursive Every finitely presented group is recursively presented but there are recursively presented groups that cannot be finitely presented However a theorem of Graham Higman states that a finitely generated group has a recursive presentation if and only if it can be embedded in a finitely presented group 2 From this we can deduce that there are up to isomorphism only countably many finitely generated recursively presented groups Bernhard Neumann has shown that there are uncountably many non isomorphic two generator groups Therefore there are finitely generated groups that cannot be recursively presented History EditOne of the earliest presentations of a group by generators and relations was given by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton in 1856 in his icosian calculus a presentation of the icosahedral group 3 The first systematic study was given by Walther von Dyck student of Felix Klein in the early 1880s laying the foundations for combinatorial group theory 4 Examples EditThe following table lists some examples of presentations for commonly studied groups Note that in each case there are many other presentations that are possible The presentation listed is not necessarily the most efficient one possible Group Presentation Commentsthe free group on S S displaystyle langle S mid varnothing rangle A free group is free in the sense that it is subject to no relations Cn the cyclic group of order n a a n displaystyle langle a mid a n rangle Dn the dihedral group of order 2n r f r n f 2 r f 2 displaystyle langle r f mid r n f 2 rf 2 rangle Here r represents a rotation and f a reflectionD the infinite dihedral group r f f 2 r f 2 displaystyle langle r f mid f 2 rf 2 rangle Dicn the dicyclic group r f r 2 n r n f 2 f r f 1 r 1 displaystyle langle r f mid r 2n r n f 2 frf 1 r 1 rangle The quaternion group Q8 is a special case when n 2Z Z x y x y y x displaystyle langle x y mid xy yx rangle Z mZ Z nZ x y x m y n x y y x displaystyle langle x y mid x m y n xy yx rangle the free abelian group on S S R displaystyle langle S mid R rangle where R is the set of all commutators of elements of SSn the symmetric group on n symbols generators s 1 s n 1 displaystyle sigma 1 ldots sigma n 1 relations s i 2 1 displaystyle sigma i 2 1 s i s j s j s i if j i 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma j sigma j sigma i mbox if j neq i pm 1 s i s i 1 s i s i 1 s i s i 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma i 1 sigma i sigma i 1 sigma i sigma i 1 The last set of relations can be transformed into s i s i 1 3 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma i 1 3 1 using s i 2 1 displaystyle sigma i 2 1 Here si is the permutation that swaps the ith element with the i 1st one The product sisi 1 is a 3 cycle on the set i i 1 i 2 Bn the braid groups generators s 1 s n 1 displaystyle sigma 1 ldots sigma n 1 relations s i s j s j s i if j i 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma j sigma j sigma i mbox if j neq i pm 1 s i s i 1 s i s i 1 s i s i 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma i 1 sigma i sigma i 1 sigma i sigma i 1 Note the similarity with the symmetric group the only difference is the removal of the relation s i 2 1 displaystyle sigma i 2 1 V4 D2 the Klein 4 group s t s 2 t 2 s t 2 displaystyle langle s t mid s 2 t 2 st 2 rangle T A4 the tetrahedral group s t s 2 t 3 s t 3 displaystyle langle s t mid s 2 t 3 st 3 rangle O S4 the octahedral group s t s 2 t 3 s t 4 displaystyle langle s t mid s 2 t 3 st 4 rangle I A5 the icosahedral group s t s 2 t 3 s t 5 displaystyle langle s t mid s 2 t 3 st 5 rangle Q8 the quaternion group i j i 4 j i j i i j i j displaystyle langle i j mid i 4 jij i iji j rangle For an alternative presentation see Dicn above with n 2 SL 2 Z a b a b a b a b a b a 4 displaystyle langle a b mid aba bab aba 4 rangle topologically a and b can be visualized as Dehn twists on the torusGL 2 Z a b j a b a b a b a b a 4 j 2 j a 2 j b 2 displaystyle langle a b j mid aba bab aba 4 j 2 ja 2 jb 2 rangle nontrivial Z 2Z group extension of SL 2 Z PSL 2 Z the modular group a b a 2 b 3 displaystyle langle a b mid a 2 b 3 rangle PSL 2 Z is the free product of the cyclic groups Z 2Z and Z 3ZHeisenberg group x y z z x y x 1 y 1 x z z x y z z y displaystyle langle x y z mid z xyx 1 y 1 xz zx yz zy rangle BS m n the Baumslag Solitar groups a b a n b a m b 1 displaystyle langle a b mid a n ba m b 1 rangle Tits group a b a 2 b 3 a b 13 a b 5 a b a b 4 a b 4 a b 1 6 displaystyle langle a b mid a 2 b 3 ab 13 a b 5 a bab 4 ab 4 ab 1 6 rangle a b is the commutatorAn example of a finitely generated group that is not finitely presented is the wreath product Z Z displaystyle mathbf Z wr mathbf Z of the group of integers with itself Some theorems EditTheorem Every group has a presentation To see this given a group G consider the free group FG on G By the universal property of free groups there exists a unique group homomorphism f FG G whose restriction to G is the identity map Let K be the kernel of this homomorphism Then K is normal in FG therefore is equal to its normal closure so G K FG K Since the identity map is surjective f is also surjective so by the First Isomorphism Theorem G K im f G This presentation may be highly inefficient if both G and K are much larger than necessary Corollary Every finite group has a finite presentation One may take the elements of the group for generators and the Cayley table for relations Novikov Boone theorem Edit The negative solution to the word problem for groups states that there is a finite presentation S R for which there is no algorithm which given two words u v decides whether u and v describe the same element in the group This was shown by Pyotr Novikov in 1955 5 and a different proof was obtained by William Boone in 1958 6 Constructions EditSuppose G has presentation S R and H has presentation T Q with S and T being disjoint Then the free product G H has presentation S T R Q and the direct product G H has presentation S T R Q S T where S T means that every element from S commutes with every element from T cf commutator Deficiency EditThe deficiency of a finite presentation S R is just S R and the deficiency of a finitely presented group G denoted def G is the maximum of the deficiency over all presentations of G The deficiency of a finite group is non positive The Schur multiplicator of a finite group G can be generated by def G generators and G is efficient if this number is required 7 Geometric group theory EditMain article Geometric group theory Further information Cayley graph Further information Word metric A presentation of a group determines a geometry in the sense of geometric group theory one has the Cayley graph which has a metric called the word metric These are also two resulting orders the weak order and the Bruhat order and corresponding Hasse diagrams An important example is in the Coxeter groups Further some properties of this graph the coarse geometry are intrinsic meaning independent of choice of generators See also EditNielsen transformation Tietze transformation Presentation of a module Presentation of a monoidNotes Edit a b c Peifer David 1997 An Introduction to Combinatorial Group Theory and the Word Problem Mathematics Magazine 70 1 3 10 doi 10 1080 0025570X 1997 11996491 Subgroups of finitely presented groups Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series A Mathematical and Physical Sciences 262 1311 455 475 1961 08 08 doi 10 1098 rspa 1961 0132 ISSN 0080 4630 Sir William Rowan Hamilton 1856 Memorandum respecting a new System of Roots of Unity PDF Philosophical Magazine 12 446 Stillwell John 2002 Mathematics and its history Springer p 374 ISBN 978 0 387 95336 6 Novikov Pyotr S 1955 On the algorithmic unsolvability of the word problem in group theory Proceedings of the Steklov Institute of Mathematics in Russian 44 1 143 Zbl 0068 01301 Boone William W 1958 The word problem PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 44 10 1061 1065 Bibcode 1958PNAS 44 1061B doi 10 1073 pnas 44 10 1061 PMC 528693 PMID 16590307 Zbl 0086 24701 Johnson D L Robertson E L 1979 Finite groups of deficiency zero In Wall C T C ed Homological Group Theory London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series Vol 36 Cambridge University Press pp 275 289 ISBN 0 521 22729 1 Zbl 0423 20029 References EditCoxeter H S M Moser W O J 1980 Generators and Relations for Discrete Groups New York Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 09212 9 This useful reference has tables of presentations of all small finite groups the reflection groups and so forth Johnson D L 1997 Presentations of Groups 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 58542 2 Schreier s method Nielsen s method free presentations subgroups and HNN extensions Golod Shafarevich theorem etc Sims Charles C 1994 Computation with Finitely Presented Groups 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13507 8 fundamental algorithms from theoretical computer science computational number theory and computational commutative algebra etc External links Editde Cornulier Yves Group Presentation MathWorld Small groups and their presentations on GroupNames Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presentation of a group amp oldid 1109099522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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