I have a group of cohomological dimension 2 generated by two elements. Is it possible to deduce that the group is commutative or, more generally, does $\mathrm{cd}\ G=2$ imply anything about the relations that $G$ must satisfy?
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7$\begingroup$ A concrete example: Take figure 8 knot (or any nontrivial 2-bridge knot). Then the fundamental group of the complement is 2-generated and has cohomological dimension 2. $\endgroup$– MishaCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 16:22
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$\begingroup$ Or any Baumslag--Solitar group (presentation $\langle a,b\mid ba^mb^{-1}=b^n\rangle$ ). $\endgroup$– HJRWCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 18:02
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$\begingroup$ Oh, I see that Lee Mosher wrote something similar in a comment below. The bottom line is that there is a huge bestiary of groups of cohomological dimension two. $\endgroup$– HJRWCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 18:06
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2 Answers
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The quotient of the free group of rank 2 by a random, long relator has cohomological dimension 2 and is not commutative.
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4$\begingroup$ In fact, quotient any relator that isn't a proper power, or primitive, works as well. $\endgroup$– Steve DCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 17:38
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$\begingroup$ Do you know an old reference? Gromov's random group theorem is overkill, one could just use that a random relator will be small-cancellation, but was this observation made before Gromov? Anyway, an answer is more useful if it provides at least some reference. $\endgroup$– Ian AgolCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 17:44
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3$\begingroup$ Lyndon, "Cohomology Theory of Groups with a Single Defining Relation". $\endgroup$– Steve DCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 17:55
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$\begingroup$ Ok, I guess it follows from the Magnus-Moldovanskii hierarchy. Wise's recent results also imply the virtual cohomological dimension is $\leq 2$ in the presence of torsion. $\endgroup$– Ian AgolCommented Jun 14, 2012 at 22:53
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$\begingroup$ I wasn't thinking so much about Gromov's random groups as "any old random thing you want to do", the point being that cd G = 2 implies just about nothing about relators, and that it's quite easy to construct oodles of examples with cd G = 2 and no particular pattern to the relators. But I quite forgot about one relator groups! Which really nails in the point. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 15, 2012 at 2:52
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To complement @Lee's answer, in "Classification of soluble groups of cohomological dimension two", (Math Z, 1979), Dion Gildenhuys does exactly what he claims, so you can see what you get under very strong additional conditions.
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1$\begingroup$ Here's a concrete example of this type, one of my favorite groups: the solvable Baumslag-Solitar group $BS(1,n) = <a,t | tat^{-1}=a^n>$. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 14, 2012 at 16:31