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Stallings theorem about ends of groups

In the mathematical subject of group theory, the Stallings theorem about ends of groups states that a finitely generated group has more than one end if and only if the group admits a nontrivial decomposition as an amalgamated free product or an HNN extension over a finite subgroup. In the modern language of Bass–Serre theory the theorem says that a finitely generated group has more than one end if and only if admits a nontrivial (that is, without a global fixed point) action on a simplicial tree with finite edge-stabilizers and without edge-inversions.

The theorem was proved by John R. Stallings, first in the torsion-free case (1968)[1] and then in the general case (1971).[2]

Ends of graphs edit

Let   be a connected graph where the degree of every vertex is finite. One can view   as a topological space by giving it the natural structure of a one-dimensional cell complex. Then the ends of   are the ends of this topological space. A more explicit definition of the number of ends of a graph is presented below for completeness.

Let   be a non-negative integer. The graph   is said to satisfy   if for every finite collection   of edges of   the graph   has at most   infinite connected components. By definition,   if   and if for every   the statement   is false. Thus   if   is the smallest nonnegative integer   such that  . If there does not exist an integer   such that  , put  . The number   is called the number of ends of  .

Informally,   is the number of "connected components at infinity" of  . If  , then for any finite set   of edges of   there exists a finite set   of edges of   with   such that   has exactly   infinite connected components. If  , then for any finite set   of edges of   and for any integer   there exists a finite set   of edges of   with   such that   has at least   infinite connected components.

Ends of groups edit

Let   be a finitely generated group. Let   be a finite generating set of   and let   be the Cayley graph of   with respect to  . The number of ends of   is defined as  . A basic fact in the theory of ends of groups says that   does not depend on the choice of a finite generating set   of  , so that   is well-defined.

Basic facts and examples edit

  • For a finitely generated group   we have   if and only if   is finite.
  • For the infinite cyclic group   we have  
  • For the free abelian group of rank two   we have  
  • For a free group   where   we have  .

Freudenthal-Hopf theorems edit

Hans Freudenthal[3] and independently Heinz Hopf[4] established in the 1940s the following two facts:

Charles T. C. Wall proved in 1967 the following complementary fact:[5]

  • A group   is virtually infinite cyclic if and only if it has a finite normal subgroup   such that   is either infinite cyclic or infinite dihedral.

Cuts and almost invariant sets edit

Let   be a finitely generated group,   be a finite generating set of   and let   be the Cayley graph of   with respect to  . For a subset   denote by   the complement   of   in  .

For a subset  , the edge boundary or the co-boundary   of   consists of all (topological) edges of   connecting a vertex from   with a vertex from  . Note that by definition  .

An ordered pair   is called a cut in   if   is finite. A cut   is called essential if both the sets   and   are infinite.

A subset   is called almost invariant if for every   the symmetric difference between   and   is finite. It is easy to see that   is a cut if and only if the sets   and   are almost invariant (equivalently, if and only if the set   is almost invariant).

Cuts and ends edit

A simple but important observation states:

  if and only if there exists at least one essential cut   in Γ.

Cuts and splittings over finite groups edit

If   where   and   are nontrivial finitely generated groups then the Cayley graph of   has at least one essential cut and hence  . Indeed, let   and   be finite generating sets for   and   accordingly so that   is a finite generating set for   and let   be the Cayley graph of   with respect to  . Let   consist of the trivial element and all the elements of   whose normal form expressions for   starts with a nontrivial element of  . Thus   consists of all elements of   whose normal form expressions for   starts with a nontrivial element of  . It is not hard to see that   is an essential cut in Γ so that  .

A more precise version of this argument shows that for a finitely generated group  :

  • If   is a free product with amalgamation where   is a finite group such that   and   then   and   are finitely generated and   .
  • If   is an HNN-extension where  ,   are isomorphic finite subgroups of   then   is a finitely generated group and  .

Stallings' theorem shows that the converse is also true.

Formal statement of Stallings' theorem edit

Let   be a finitely generated group.

Then   if and only if one of the following holds:

  • The group   admits a splitting   as a free product with amalgamation where   is a finite group such that   and  .
  • The group   is an HNN extension   where and  ,   are isomorphic finite subgroups of  .

In the language of Bass–Serre theory this result can be restated as follows: For a finitely generated group   we have   if and only if   admits a nontrivial (that is, without a global fixed vertex) action on a simplicial tree with finite edge-stabilizers and without edge-inversions.

For the case where   is a torsion-free finitely generated group, Stallings' theorem implies that   if and only if   admits a proper free product decomposition   with both   and   nontrivial.

Applications and generalizations edit

  • Among the immediate applications of Stallings' theorem was a proof by Stallings[6] of a long-standing conjecture that every finitely generated group of cohomological dimension one is free and that every torsion-free virtually free group is free.
  • Stallings' theorem also implies that the property of having a nontrivial splitting over a finite subgroup is a quasi-isometry invariant of a finitely generated group since the number of ends of a finitely generated group is easily seen to be a quasi-isometry invariant. For this reason Stallings' theorem is considered to be one of the first results in geometric group theory.
  • Stallings' theorem was a starting point for Dunwoody's accessibility theory. A finitely generated group   is said to be accessible if the process of iterated nontrivial splitting of   over finite subgroups always terminates in a finite number of steps. In Bass–Serre theory terms that the number of edges in a reduced splitting of   as the fundamental group of a graph of groups with finite edge groups is bounded by some constant depending on  . Dunwoody proved[7] that every finitely presented group is accessible but that there do exist finitely generated groups that are not accessible.[8] Linnell[9] showed that if one bounds the size of finite subgroups over which the splittings are taken then every finitely generated group is accessible in this sense as well. These results in turn gave rise to other versions of accessibility such as Bestvina-Feighn accessibility[10] of finitely presented groups (where the so-called "small" splittings are considered), acylindrical accessibility,[11][12] strong accessibility,[13] and others.
  • Stallings' theorem is a key tool in proving that a finitely generated group   is virtually free if and only if   can be represented as the fundamental group of a finite graph of groups where all vertex and edge groups are finite (see, for example,[14]).
  • Using Dunwoody's accessibility result, Stallings' theorem about ends of groups and the fact that if   is a finitely presented group with asymptotic dimension 1 then   is virtually free[15] one can show [16] that for a finitely presented word-hyperbolic group   the hyperbolic boundary of   has topological dimension zero if and only if   is virtually free.
  • Relative versions of Stallings' theorem and relative ends of finitely generated groups with respect to subgroups have also been considered. For a subgroup   of a finitely generated group   one defines the number of relative ends   as the number of ends of the relative Cayley graph (the Schreier coset graph) of   with respect to  . The case where   is called a semi-splitting of   over  . Early work on semi-splittings, inspired by Stallings' theorem, was done in the 1970s and 1980s by Scott,[17] Swarup,[18] and others.[19][20] The work of Sageev[21] and Gerasimov[22] in the 1990s showed that for a subgroup   the condition   corresponds to the group   admitting an essential isometric action on a CAT(0)-cubing where a subgroup commensurable with   stabilizes an essential "hyperplane" (a simplicial tree is an example of a CAT(0)-cubing where the hyperplanes are the midpoints of edges). In certain situations such a semi-splitting can be promoted to an actual algebraic splitting, typically over a subgroup commensurable with  , such as for the case where   is finite (Stallings' theorem). Another situation where an actual splitting can be obtained (modulo a few exceptions) is for semi-splittings over virtually polycyclic subgroups. Here the case of semi-splittings of word-hyperbolic groups over two-ended (virtually infinite cyclic) subgroups was treated by Scott-Swarup[23] and by Bowditch.[24] The case of semi-splittings of finitely generated groups with respect to virtually polycyclic subgroups is dealt with by the algebraic torus theorem of Dunwoody-Swenson.[25]
  • A number of new proofs of Stallings' theorem have been obtained by others after Stallings' original proof. Dunwoody gave a proof[26] based on the ideas of edge-cuts. Later Dunwoody also gave a proof of Stallings' theorem for finitely presented groups using the method of "tracks" on finite 2-complexes.[7] Niblo obtained a proof[27] of Stallings' theorem as a consequence of Sageev's CAT(0)-cubing relative version, where the CAT(0)-cubing is eventually promoted to being a tree. Niblo's paper also defines an abstract group-theoretic obstruction (which is a union of double cosets of   in  ) for obtaining an actual splitting from a semi-splitting. It is also possible to prove Stallings' theorem for finitely presented groups using Riemannian geometry techniques of minimal surfaces, where one first realizes a finitely presented group as the fundamental group of a compact  -manifold (see, for example, a sketch of this argument in the survey article of Wall[28]). Gromov outlined a proof (see pp. 228–230 in [16]) where the minimal surfaces argument is replaced by an easier harmonic analysis argument and this approach was pushed further by Kapovich to cover the original case of finitely generated groups.[15][29]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ John R. Stallings. On torsion-free groups with infinitely many ends. Annals of Mathematics (2), vol. 88 (1968), pp. 312–334
  2. ^ John Stallings. Group theory and three-dimensional manifolds. A James K. Whittemore Lecture in Mathematics given at Yale University, 1969. Yale Mathematical Monographs, 4. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn.-London, 1971.
  3. ^ H. Freudenthal. Über die Enden diskreter Räume und Gruppen. Comment. Math. Helv. 17, (1945). 1-38.
  4. ^ H. Hopf. Enden offener Räume und unendliche diskontinuierliche Gruppen. Comment. Math. Helv. 16, (1944). 81-100
  5. ^ Lemma 4.1 in C. T. C. Wall, Poincaré Complexes: I. Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, Vol. 86, No. 2 (Sep., 1967), pp. 213-245
  6. ^ John R. Stallings. Groups of dimension 1 are locally free. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 74 (1968), pp. 361–364
  7. ^ a b M. J. Dunwoody. The accessibility of finitely presented groups. Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 81 (1985), no. 3, pp. 449-457
  8. ^ M. J. Dunwoody. An inaccessible group. Geometric group theory, Vol. 1 (Sussex, 1991), pp. 75–78, London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, vol. 181, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993; ISBN 0-521-43529-3
  9. ^ Linnell, P. A. (1983). "On accessibility of groups". Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra. 30 (1): 39–46. doi:10.1016/0022-4049(83)90037-3. MR 0716233.
  10. ^ M. Bestvina and M. Feighn. Bounding the complexity of simplicial group actions on trees. Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 103 (1991), no. 3, pp. 449–469
  11. ^ Z. Sela. Acylindrical accessibility for groups. Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 129 (1997), no. 3, pp. 527–565
  12. ^ T. Delzant. Sur l'accessibilité acylindrique des groupes de présentation finie. 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine Université de Grenoble. Annales de l'Institut Fourier, vol. 49 (1999), no. 4, pp. 1215–1224
  13. ^ Delzant, Thomas; Potyagailo, Leonid (2001). "Accessibilité hiérarchique des groupes de présentation finie". Topology. 40 (3): 617–629. doi:10.1016/S0040-9383(99)00078-6. MR 1838998.
  14. ^ H. Bass. Covering theory for graphs of groups. Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra, vol. 89 (1993), no. 1-2, pp. 3–47
  15. ^ a b Gentimis Thanos, Asymptotic dimension of finitely presented groups, http://www.ams.org/journals/proc/2008-136-12/S0002-9939-08-08973-9/home.html
  16. ^ a b M. Gromov, Hyperbolic Groups, in "Essays in Group Theory" (G. M. Gersten, ed.), MSRI Publ. 8, 1987, pp. 75-263
  17. ^ Scott, Peter (1977–1978). "Ends of pairs of groups". Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra. 11 (1–3): 179–198. doi:10.1016/0022-4049(77)90051-2. MR 0487104.
  18. ^ Swarup, G. Ananda (1977–1978). "Relative version of a theorem of Stallings". Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra. 11 (1–3): 75–82. doi:10.1016/0022-4049(77)90042-1. MR 0466326.
  19. ^ H. Müller. Decomposition theorems for group pairs. Mathematische Zeitschrift, vol. 176 (1981), no. 2, pp. 223–246
  20. ^ Kropholler, P. H.; Roller, M. A. (1989). "Relative ends and duality groups". Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra. 61 (2): 197–210. doi:10.1016/0022-4049(89)90014-5. MR 1025923.
  21. ^ Michah Sageev. Ends of group pairs and non-positively curved cube complexes. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society (3), vol. 71 (1995), no. 3, pp. 585–617
  22. ^ V. N. Gerasimov. Semi-splittings of groups and actions on cubings. (in Russian) Algebra, geometry, analysis and mathematical physics (Novosibirsk, 1996), pp. 91–109, 190, Izdat. Ross. Akad. Nauk Sib. Otd. Inst. Mat., Novosibirsk, 1997
  23. ^ G. P. Scott, and G. A. Swarup. An algebraic annulus theorem. 2007-07-15 at the Wayback Machine Pacific Journal of Mathematics, vol. 196 (2000), no. 2, pp. 461–506
  24. ^ B. H. Bowditch. Cut points and canonical splittings of hyperbolic groups. Acta Mathematica, vol. 180 (1998), no. 2, pp. 145–186
  25. ^ M. J. Dunwoody, and E. L. Swenson. The algebraic torus theorem. Inventiones Mathematicae, vol. 140 (2000), no. 3, pp. 605–637
  26. ^ M. J. Dunwoody. Cutting up graphs. Combinatorica, vol. 2 (1982), no. 1, pp. 15–23
  27. ^ Graham A. Niblo. A geometric proof of Stallings' theorem on groups with more than one end. Geometriae Dedicata, vol. 105 (2004), pp. 61–76
  28. ^ C. T. C. Wall. The geometry of abstract groups and their splittings. Revista Matemática Complutense vol. 16(2003), no. 1, pp. 5–101
  29. ^ M. Kapovich. Energy of harmonic functions and Gromov's proof of Stallings' theorem, preprint, 2007, arXiv:0707.4231

stallings, theorem, about, ends, groups, mathematical, subject, group, theory, states, that, finitely, generated, group, displaystyle, more, than, only, group, displaystyle, admits, nontrivial, decomposition, amalgamated, free, product, extension, over, finite. In the mathematical subject of group theory the Stallings theorem about ends of groups states that a finitely generated group G displaystyle G has more than one end if and only if the group G displaystyle G admits a nontrivial decomposition as an amalgamated free product or an HNN extension over a finite subgroup In the modern language of Bass Serre theory the theorem says that a finitely generated group G displaystyle G has more than one end if and only if G displaystyle G admits a nontrivial that is without a global fixed point action on a simplicial tree with finite edge stabilizers and without edge inversions The theorem was proved by John R Stallings first in the torsion free case 1968 1 and then in the general case 1971 2 Contents 1 Ends of graphs 2 Ends of groups 2 1 Basic facts and examples 2 2 Freudenthal Hopf theorems 2 3 Cuts and almost invariant sets 2 3 1 Cuts and ends 2 3 2 Cuts and splittings over finite groups 3 Formal statement of Stallings theorem 4 Applications and generalizations 5 See also 6 NotesEnds of graphs editMain article End graph theory Let G displaystyle Gamma nbsp be a connected graph where the degree of every vertex is finite One can view G displaystyle Gamma nbsp as a topological space by giving it the natural structure of a one dimensional cell complex Then the ends of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp are the ends of this topological space A more explicit definition of the number of ends of a graph is presented below for completeness Let n 0 displaystyle n geqslant 0 nbsp be a non negative integer The graph G displaystyle Gamma nbsp is said to satisfy e G n displaystyle e Gamma leqslant n nbsp if for every finite collection F displaystyle F nbsp of edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp the graph G F displaystyle Gamma F nbsp has at most n displaystyle n nbsp infinite connected components By definition e G m displaystyle e Gamma m nbsp if e G m displaystyle e Gamma leqslant m nbsp and if for every 0 n lt m displaystyle 0 leqslant n lt m nbsp the statement e G n displaystyle e Gamma leqslant n nbsp is false Thus e G m displaystyle e Gamma m nbsp if m displaystyle m nbsp is the smallest nonnegative integer n displaystyle n nbsp such that e G n displaystyle e Gamma leqslant n nbsp If there does not exist an integer n 0 displaystyle n geqslant 0 nbsp such that e G n displaystyle e Gamma leqslant n nbsp put e G displaystyle e Gamma infty nbsp The number e G displaystyle e Gamma nbsp is called the number of ends of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp Informally e G displaystyle e Gamma nbsp is the number of connected components at infinity of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp If e G m lt displaystyle e Gamma m lt infty nbsp then for any finite set F displaystyle F nbsp of edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp there exists a finite set K displaystyle K nbsp of edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp with F K displaystyle F subseteq K nbsp such that G F displaystyle Gamma F nbsp has exactly m displaystyle m nbsp infinite connected components If e G displaystyle e Gamma infty nbsp then for any finite set F displaystyle F nbsp of edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp and for any integer n 0 displaystyle n geqslant 0 nbsp there exists a finite set K displaystyle K nbsp of edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp with F K displaystyle F subseteq K nbsp such that G K displaystyle Gamma K nbsp has at least n displaystyle n nbsp infinite connected components Ends of groups editLet G displaystyle G nbsp be a finitely generated group Let S G displaystyle S subseteq G nbsp be a finite generating set of G displaystyle G nbsp and let G G S displaystyle Gamma G S nbsp be the Cayley graph of G displaystyle G nbsp with respect to S displaystyle S nbsp The number of ends of G displaystyle G nbsp is defined as e G e G G S displaystyle e G e Gamma G S nbsp A basic fact in the theory of ends of groups says that e G G S displaystyle e Gamma G S nbsp does not depend on the choice of a finite generating set S displaystyle S nbsp of G displaystyle G nbsp so that e G displaystyle e G nbsp is well defined Basic facts and examples edit For a finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp we have e G 0 displaystyle e G 0 nbsp if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp is finite For the infinite cyclic group Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp we have e Z 2 displaystyle e mathbb Z 2 nbsp For the free abelian group of rank two Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp we have e Z 2 1 displaystyle e mathbb Z 2 1 nbsp For a free group F X displaystyle F X nbsp where 1 lt X lt displaystyle 1 lt X lt infty nbsp we have e F X displaystyle e F X infty nbsp Freudenthal Hopf theorems edit Hans Freudenthal 3 and independently Heinz Hopf 4 established in the 1940s the following two facts For any finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp we have e G 0 1 2 displaystyle e G in 0 1 2 infty nbsp For any finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp we have e G 2 displaystyle e G 2 nbsp if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp is virtually infinite cyclic that is G displaystyle G nbsp contains an infinite cyclic subgroup of finite index Charles T C Wall proved in 1967 the following complementary fact 5 A group G displaystyle G nbsp is virtually infinite cyclic if and only if it has a finite normal subgroup W displaystyle W nbsp such that G W displaystyle G W nbsp is either infinite cyclic or infinite dihedral Cuts and almost invariant sets edit Let G displaystyle G nbsp be a finitely generated group S G displaystyle S subseteq G nbsp be a finite generating set of G displaystyle G nbsp and let G G G S displaystyle Gamma Gamma G S nbsp be the Cayley graph of G displaystyle G nbsp with respect to S displaystyle S nbsp For a subset A G displaystyle A subseteq G nbsp denote by A displaystyle A nbsp the complement G A displaystyle G A nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp in G displaystyle G nbsp For a subset A G displaystyle A subseteq G nbsp the edge boundary or the co boundary d A displaystyle delta A nbsp of A displaystyle A nbsp consists of all topological edges of G displaystyle Gamma nbsp connecting a vertex from A displaystyle A nbsp with a vertex from A displaystyle A nbsp Note that by definition d A d A displaystyle delta A delta A nbsp An ordered pair A A displaystyle A A nbsp is called a cut in G displaystyle Gamma nbsp if d A displaystyle delta A nbsp is finite A cut A A displaystyle A A nbsp is called essential if both the sets A displaystyle A nbsp and A displaystyle A nbsp are infinite A subset A G displaystyle A subseteq G nbsp is called almost invariant if for every g G displaystyle g in G nbsp the symmetric difference between A displaystyle A nbsp and A g displaystyle Ag nbsp is finite It is easy to see that A A displaystyle A A nbsp is a cut if and only if the sets A displaystyle A nbsp and A displaystyle A nbsp are almost invariant equivalently if and only if the set A displaystyle A nbsp is almost invariant Cuts and ends edit A simple but important observation states e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp if and only if there exists at least one essential cut A A displaystyle A A nbsp in G Cuts and splittings over finite groups edit If G H K displaystyle G H K nbsp where H displaystyle H nbsp and K displaystyle K nbsp are nontrivial finitely generated groups then the Cayley graph of G displaystyle G nbsp has at least one essential cut and hence e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp Indeed let X displaystyle X nbsp and Y displaystyle Y nbsp be finite generating sets for H displaystyle H nbsp and K displaystyle K nbsp accordingly so that S X Y displaystyle S X cup Y nbsp is a finite generating set for G displaystyle G nbsp and let G G G S displaystyle Gamma Gamma G S nbsp be the Cayley graph of G displaystyle G nbsp with respect to S displaystyle S nbsp Let A displaystyle A nbsp consist of the trivial element and all the elements of G displaystyle G nbsp whose normal form expressions for G H K displaystyle G H K nbsp starts with a nontrivial element of H displaystyle H nbsp Thus A displaystyle A nbsp consists of all elements of G displaystyle G nbsp whose normal form expressions for G H K displaystyle G H K nbsp starts with a nontrivial element of K displaystyle K nbsp It is not hard to see that A A displaystyle A A nbsp is an essential cut in G so that e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp A more precise version of this argument shows that for a finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp If G H C K displaystyle G H C K nbsp is a free product with amalgamation where C displaystyle C nbsp is a finite group such that C H displaystyle C neq H nbsp and C K displaystyle C neq K nbsp then H displaystyle H nbsp and K displaystyle K nbsp are finitely generated and e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp If G H t t 1 C 1 t C 2 displaystyle G langle H t t 1 C 1 t C 2 rangle nbsp is an HNN extension where C 1 displaystyle C 1 nbsp C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp are isomorphic finite subgroups of H displaystyle H nbsp then G displaystyle G nbsp is a finitely generated group and e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp Stallings theorem shows that the converse is also true Formal statement of Stallings theorem editLet G displaystyle G nbsp be a finitely generated group Then e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp if and only if one of the following holds The group G displaystyle G nbsp admits a splitting G H C K displaystyle G H C K nbsp as a free product with amalgamation where C displaystyle C nbsp is a finite group such that C H displaystyle C neq H nbsp and C K displaystyle C neq K nbsp The group G displaystyle G nbsp is an HNN extension G H t t 1 C 1 t C 2 displaystyle G langle H t t 1 C 1 t C 2 rangle nbsp where and C 1 displaystyle C 1 nbsp C 2 displaystyle C 2 nbsp are isomorphic finite subgroups of H displaystyle H nbsp In the language of Bass Serre theory this result can be restated as follows For a finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp we have e G gt 1 displaystyle e G gt 1 nbsp if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp admits a nontrivial that is without a global fixed vertex action on a simplicial tree with finite edge stabilizers and without edge inversions For the case where G displaystyle G nbsp is a torsion free finitely generated group Stallings theorem implies that e G displaystyle e G infty nbsp if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp admits a proper free product decomposition G A B displaystyle G A B nbsp with both A displaystyle A nbsp and B displaystyle B nbsp nontrivial Applications and generalizations editAmong the immediate applications of Stallings theorem was a proof by Stallings 6 of a long standing conjecture that every finitely generated group of cohomological dimension one is free and that every torsion free virtually free group is free Stallings theorem also implies that the property of having a nontrivial splitting over a finite subgroup is a quasi isometry invariant of a finitely generated group since the number of ends of a finitely generated group is easily seen to be a quasi isometry invariant For this reason Stallings theorem is considered to be one of the first results in geometric group theory Stallings theorem was a starting point for Dunwoody s accessibility theory A finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp is said to be accessible if the process of iterated nontrivial splitting of G displaystyle G nbsp over finite subgroups always terminates in a finite number of steps In Bass Serre theory terms that the number of edges in a reduced splitting of G displaystyle G nbsp as the fundamental group of a graph of groups with finite edge groups is bounded by some constant depending on G displaystyle G nbsp Dunwoody proved 7 that every finitely presented group is accessible but that there do exist finitely generated groups that are not accessible 8 Linnell 9 showed that if one bounds the size of finite subgroups over which the splittings are taken then every finitely generated group is accessible in this sense as well These results in turn gave rise to other versions of accessibility such as Bestvina Feighn accessibility 10 of finitely presented groups where the so called small splittings are considered acylindrical accessibility 11 12 strong accessibility 13 and others Stallings theorem is a key tool in proving that a finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp is virtually free if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp can be represented as the fundamental group of a finite graph of groups where all vertex and edge groups are finite see for example 14 Using Dunwoody s accessibility result Stallings theorem about ends of groups and the fact that if G displaystyle G nbsp is a finitely presented group with asymptotic dimension 1 then G displaystyle G nbsp is virtually free 15 one can show 16 that for a finitely presented word hyperbolic group G displaystyle G nbsp the hyperbolic boundary of G displaystyle G nbsp has topological dimension zero if and only if G displaystyle G nbsp is virtually free Relative versions of Stallings theorem and relative ends of finitely generated groups with respect to subgroups have also been considered For a subgroup H G displaystyle H leqslant G nbsp of a finitely generated group G displaystyle G nbsp one defines the number of relative ends e G H displaystyle e G H nbsp as the number of ends of the relative Cayley graph the Schreier coset graph of G displaystyle G nbsp with respect to H displaystyle H nbsp The case where e G H gt 1 displaystyle e G H gt 1 nbsp is called a semi splitting of G displaystyle G nbsp over H displaystyle H nbsp Early work on semi splittings inspired by Stallings theorem was done in the 1970s and 1980s by Scott 17 Swarup 18 and others 19 20 The work of Sageev 21 and Gerasimov 22 in the 1990s showed that for a subgroup H G displaystyle H leqslant G nbsp the condition e G H gt 1 displaystyle e G H gt 1 nbsp corresponds to the group G displaystyle G nbsp admitting an essential isometric action on a CAT 0 cubing where a subgroup commensurable with H displaystyle H nbsp stabilizes an essential hyperplane a simplicial tree is an example of a CAT 0 cubing where the hyperplanes are the midpoints of edges In certain situations such a semi splitting can be promoted to an actual algebraic splitting typically over a subgroup commensurable with H displaystyle H nbsp such as for the case where H displaystyle H nbsp is finite Stallings theorem Another situation where an actual splitting can be obtained modulo a few exceptions is for semi splittings over virtually polycyclic subgroups Here the case of semi splittings of word hyperbolic groups over two ended virtually infinite cyclic subgroups was treated by Scott Swarup 23 and by Bowditch 24 The case of semi splittings of finitely generated groups with respect to virtually polycyclic subgroups is dealt with by the algebraic torus theorem of Dunwoody Swenson 25 A number of new proofs of Stallings theorem have been obtained by others after Stallings original proof Dunwoody gave a proof 26 based on the ideas of edge cuts Later Dunwoody also gave a proof of Stallings theorem for finitely presented groups using the method of tracks on finite 2 complexes 7 Niblo obtained a proof 27 of Stallings theorem as a consequence of Sageev s CAT 0 cubing relative version where the CAT 0 cubing is eventually promoted to being a tree Niblo s paper also defines an abstract group theoretic obstruction which is a union of double cosets of H displaystyle H nbsp in G displaystyle G nbsp for obtaining an actual splitting from a semi splitting It is also possible to prove Stallings theorem for finitely presented groups using Riemannian geometry techniques of minimal surfaces where one first realizes a finitely presented group as the fundamental group of a compact 4 displaystyle 4 nbsp manifold see for example a sketch of this argument in the survey article of Wall 28 Gromov outlined a proof see pp 228 230 in 16 where the minimal surfaces argument is replaced by an easier harmonic analysis argument and this approach was pushed further by Kapovich to cover the original case of finitely generated groups 15 29 See also editFree product with amalgamation HNN extension Bass Serre theory Graph of groups Geometric group theoryNotes edit John R Stallings On torsion free groups with infinitely many ends Annals of Mathematics 2 vol 88 1968 pp 312 334 John Stallings Group theory and three dimensional manifolds A James K Whittemore Lecture in Mathematics given at Yale University 1969 Yale Mathematical Monographs 4 Yale University Press New Haven Conn London 1971 H Freudenthal Uber die Enden diskreter Raume und Gruppen Comment Math Helv 17 1945 1 38 H Hopf Enden offener Raume und unendliche diskontinuierliche Gruppen Comment Math Helv 16 1944 81 100 Lemma 4 1 in C T C Wall Poincare Complexes I Annals of Mathematics Second Series Vol 86 No 2 Sep 1967 pp 213 245 John R Stallings Groups of dimension 1 are locally free Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society vol 74 1968 pp 361 364 a b M J Dunwoody The accessibility of finitely presented groups Inventiones Mathematicae vol 81 1985 no 3 pp 449 457 M J Dunwoody An inaccessible group Geometric group theory Vol 1 Sussex 1991 pp 75 78 London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series vol 181 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1993 ISBN 0 521 43529 3 Linnell P A 1983 On accessibility of groups Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 30 1 39 46 doi 10 1016 0022 4049 83 90037 3 MR 0716233 M Bestvina and M Feighn Bounding the complexity of simplicial group actions on trees Inventiones Mathematicae vol 103 1991 no 3 pp 449 469 Z Sela Acylindrical accessibility for groups Inventiones Mathematicae vol 129 1997 no 3 pp 527 565 T Delzant Sur l accessibilite acylindrique des groupes de presentation finie Archived 2011 06 05 at the Wayback Machine Universite de Grenoble Annales de l Institut Fourier vol 49 1999 no 4 pp 1215 1224 Delzant Thomas Potyagailo Leonid 2001 Accessibilite hierarchique des groupes de presentation finie Topology 40 3 617 629 doi 10 1016 S0040 9383 99 00078 6 MR 1838998 H Bass Covering theory for graphs of groups Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra vol 89 1993 no 1 2 pp 3 47 a b Gentimis Thanos Asymptotic dimension of finitely presented groups http www ams org journals proc 2008 136 12 S0002 9939 08 08973 9 home html a b M Gromov Hyperbolic Groups in Essays in Group Theory G M Gersten ed MSRI Publ 8 1987 pp 75 263 Scott Peter 1977 1978 Ends of pairs of groups Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 11 1 3 179 198 doi 10 1016 0022 4049 77 90051 2 MR 0487104 Swarup G Ananda 1977 1978 Relative version of a theorem of Stallings Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 11 1 3 75 82 doi 10 1016 0022 4049 77 90042 1 MR 0466326 H Muller Decomposition theorems for group pairs Mathematische Zeitschrift vol 176 1981 no 2 pp 223 246 Kropholler P H Roller M A 1989 Relative ends and duality groups Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 61 2 197 210 doi 10 1016 0022 4049 89 90014 5 MR 1025923 Michah Sageev Ends of group pairs and non positively curved cube complexes Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 3 vol 71 1995 no 3 pp 585 617 V N Gerasimov Semi splittings of groups and actions on cubings in Russian Algebra geometry analysis and mathematical physics Novosibirsk 1996 pp 91 109 190 Izdat Ross Akad Nauk Sib Otd Inst Mat Novosibirsk 1997 G P Scott and G A Swarup An algebraic annulus theorem Archived 2007 07 15 at the Wayback Machine Pacific Journal of Mathematics vol 196 2000 no 2 pp 461 506 B H Bowditch Cut points and canonical splittings of hyperbolic groups Acta Mathematica vol 180 1998 no 2 pp 145 186 M J Dunwoody and E L Swenson The algebraic torus theorem Inventiones Mathematicae vol 140 2000 no 3 pp 605 637 M J Dunwoody Cutting up graphs Combinatorica vol 2 1982 no 1 pp 15 23 Graham A Niblo A geometric proof of Stallings theorem on groups with more than one end Geometriae Dedicata vol 105 2004 pp 61 76 C T C Wall The geometry of abstract groups and their splittings Revista Matematica Complutense vol 16 2003 no 1 pp 5 101 M Kapovich Energy of harmonic functions and Gromov s proof of Stallings theorem preprint 2007 arXiv 0707 4231 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stallings theorem about ends of groups amp oldid 1222467677, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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