Recall that a group has the Howson property (also known as the finitely generated intersection property) if the intersection of any two finitely generated subgroups is again finitely generated. I am interested in when the amalgam of two free groups has the Howson property.
It is a classical theorem of Burns that amalgamated products of the form $G \ast_C F$ have the Howson property so long as $G$ has the Howson property, $F$ is free, and $C$ is maximal cyclic in $F$. The proof proceeds using combinatorial group theoretic methods (i.e. normal forms for elements, Schreier transversals). On the other hand, one can inject some geometry into the picture and consider the (strictly) stronger property of local quasiconvexity in hyperbolic groups (i.e. the condition that all finitely generated subgroups are quasiconvex). Amalgams of locally quasiconvex hyperbolic groups over cyclic subgroups are again locally quasiconvex, giving many examples of cyclic amalgams with the Howson property.
Burns phrases his maximality assumption as saying $C$ is isolated in $F$, namely that if $a^n \in C$, then $a \in C$ also. It is not difficult to construct examples where the amalgam fails to have the Howson property if $C$ is fails to be isolated. Indeed, if $F, F'$ are free and $g \in F, h \in F'$, then $F \ast_{g^2 = h^3} F'$ contains a copy of $F_2 \times \mathbb{Z}$, which does not have the Howson property. Hence we may ask:
Question 1: Let $F, F'$ be finitely generated free groups, $H \leqslant F, F'$ a nontrivial isolated subgroup. When does the amalgam $G = F \ast_H F'$ have the Howson property?
As far as I am aware, there is no general result outside of the case when $H$ is cyclic. Of course, when $H$ is a free factor of both $F$ and $F'$, then $G$ is free and so has the Howson property. Outside of this trivial case, are there known examples of such $G$ with or without the property? And should one expect the answer to depend on the ranks of $F, F',$ and $H$? Moreover, when $H$ is finitely generated of infinite index and malnormal in one factor, it follows from the Bestvina-Feighn combination theorem that $G$ is hyperbolic. I would not be surprised if the following had a negative answer, though I can only imagine verifying that through their failing the Howson property.
Question 2: Suppose $H \leqslant F, F'$ is finitely generated, malnormal, of infinite index, and not cyclic. Is the amalgam $G = F \ast_H F'$ locally quasiconvex?