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Aspherical space whose fundamental group is subgroup of the Euclidean isometry group

Let $M$ be a smooth, compact manifold without a boundary, with its universal covering $\tilde{M} = \mathbb{R}^n$. If there exists an injective homomorphism $h: \pi_1(M) \rightarrow O(k) \ltimes \...
Chicken feed's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
115 views

Finite homology of a homogeneous space

Let $\Gamma$ be a cocompact lattice in $\operatorname{SL}(2,\mathbb R)$ and $X=\operatorname{SL}(2,\mathbb R)/\Gamma$ be the underlying homogeneous space. Can the homology group $H_1(X,\mathbb Z)$ be ...
William of Baskerville's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
279 views

Ways to prove that $n$-component Brunnian link is nontrivial

The attached image shows a way to construct an $n$-component Brunnian link for any $n\geq 3$. That is, this link is not trivial, but deleting any of its components makes the new link trivial. The ...
Haldot's user avatar
  • 214
11 votes
0 answers
220 views

On an Artin (?) subgroup of braid groups

While working on something apparently unrelated I encountered a "braid-like" group, which is a relatively geometric subgroup of a braid group and seems to be itself an Artin group. It seems ...
Simon Henry's user avatar
  • 42.4k
1 vote
1 answer
249 views

Name for extension of the symplectic group

Let $S_g$ denote an ortientable surface of genus $g$. Let $\operatorname{Diff}(S_g)$ denote the group of diffeomorphism (that need not fix the orientation). Is there a name for the image of $\...
qqqqqqw's user avatar
  • 965
1 vote
2 answers
334 views

Examples of finite polyhedra with finitely generated simple fundamental group

For $n\geq 2$, $P\mathbb{R}^n$ is a simple example of finite polyhedron with finitely generated simple fundamental group. I was wondering if someone could give me an example of a finite polyhedron ...
M.Ramana's user avatar
  • 1,182
0 votes
0 answers
194 views

Equivariant cohomology with discrete group action

As far as I know, the equivariant cohomology can be regarded as the generalisation of de Rham cohomology with group action on manifolds. From the literature, the group action is Lie group type. I am ...
Light man's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
158 views

What is the meaning of local inertia conjugation property?

In Hatcher, Allen; Lochak, Pierre; Schneps, Leila, On the Teichmüller tower of mapping class groups, J. Reine Angew. Math. 521, 1-24 (2000). ZBL0953.20030., we have: Abstract. Let $\widehat{G T}^{1}$ ...
Usa's user avatar
  • 119
18 votes
0 answers
1k views

What is the strongest nerve lemma?

The most basic nerve lemma can be found as Corollary 4G.3 in Hatcher's Algebraic Topology: If $\mathcal U$ is an open cover of a paracompact space $X$ such that every nonempty intersection of ...
2xThink's user avatar
  • 81
3 votes
0 answers
282 views

Commutator length of the fundamental group of some grope

A popular way to describe a grope as the direct limit $L$ of a nested sequence of compact 2-dimensional polyhedra $L_0 \to L_1 \to L_2 \to \cdots$ obtained as follows. Take $L_0$ as some $S_g$, an ...
Shijie Gu's user avatar
  • 2,083
8 votes
1 answer
387 views

Outer automorphism group of Brieskorn homology sphere?

In this post, it is discussed how a Brieskorn homology sphere $\Sigma(a_1,a_2,a_3)$ with $\displaystyle \frac{1}{a_1}+ \frac{1}{a_2}+ \frac{1}{a_3} < 1$ is an aspherical manifold with a ...
Jeffrey Rolland's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
288 views

A finitely presented group whose rational cohomology is not nilpotent

Does there exist a finitely presented (preferably $\text{FP}_{\infty}$) group $\Gamma$ and an element $\alpha \in \text{H}^{\ast>0}(B\Gamma;\mathbf{Q})$ that is not nilpotent? If non-discrete ...
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
16 votes
1 answer
505 views

How many cells needed to build the classifying space $BG$?

Let $G$ be a finitely presented group of cohomological dimension $n$. Apart from the unresolved ambiguity pertaining to the Eilenberg--Ganea conjecture, it is known that we can find an $n$-dimensional ...
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
658 views

Generalized Birman exact sequence for surfaces with boundaries

Let $S_g^n$ be a surface of genus g with n boundaries and let $Mod(S_g^n)$ be its mapping class group. We will also denote by $S_{g,m}^n$ a surface of genus g with n boundaries and m punctures. The ...
Philippe Tranchida's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
336 views

"Simplicial complex" product of groups?

Let $X=(V,E)$ be a graph, and to each vertex $v \in V$, associate a group $G_v$. The graph product of the groups $G_v$ (as defined e.g. here) is $F/R$; the quotient of the free product of the $G_v$ by ...
Matt's user avatar
  • 208
14 votes
2 answers
788 views

Restriction of a branched cover to its branch locus

Assume that we have a smooth, compact, complex surface $X$, and a smooth and irreducible divisor $B \subset X$. Let $G$ be a finite group. For every group epimorphism $$\varphi \colon \pi_1(X-B) \to G,...
Francesco Polizzi's user avatar
13 votes
1 answer
289 views

Powers of the Euler class, torsion free subgroup of Homeo($S^1$)

For any subgroup $G$ of $\text{Homeo}(S^1)$, we have the Euler class $\chi$ in the group cohomology $H^2(G;\mathbb{Z})$. One can think of this class as the pullback of the generator of $H^2(\mathrm{B}\...
Sam Nariman's user avatar
  • 1,003
14 votes
2 answers
906 views

Acyclic group and finite CW-complex

Is there a nontrivial example of an acyclic group $G$ such that its corresponding Eilenberg space $K(G,1)$ is homotopy equivalent to a finite CW-complex ?
Paris's user avatar
  • 717
35 votes
3 answers
1k views

Second Betti number of lattices in $\mathrm{SL}_3(\mathbf{R})$

We fix $G=\mathrm{SL}_3(\mathbf{R})$. Let $\Gamma$ be a torsion-free cocompact lattice in $G$. Is $b_2(\Gamma)=0$? Here the second Betti number $b_2(\Gamma)$ is both the dimension of the ...
YCor's user avatar
  • 63.9k
17 votes
1 answer
683 views

Relationship between Smith's special homology groups and equivariant homology theory

EDIT: Tyler Lawson's answer was so nice that I was inspired to rewrite the notes discussed below to use Bredon homology in the definition of the Smith special homology groups. The original version is ...
Andy Putman's user avatar
  • 44.8k
9 votes
1 answer
308 views

Projective resolutions of finite-dimensional representations of infinite groups

Let $G$ be a group and let $V$ be a finite-dimensional complex representation of $G$. Question: Under what circumstances can I find a projective resolution $$ \cdots \longrightarrow P_3 \...
Joan's user avatar
  • 91
6 votes
1 answer
237 views

Example similar to the Griffiths twin cone but with fundamental group that allows surjection onto $\mathbb Z$

The Griffiths twin cone is an example of a wedge sum of two contractible spaces being non-contractible. Namely, it is the wedge sum $\mathbb G=C\mathbb H\vee_p C\mathbb H$ of two coni over the ...
Alexander Gelbukh's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
331 views

Epimorphisms from the genus $2$ surface braid group to finite groups

This question is somehow related to my previous MO question Explicit description of a subgroup of the braid group $\mathsf{B}_2(C_2)$; for the reader convenience, let me write down again the relevant ...
Francesco Polizzi's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
151 views

How to prove that $\phi: \;\mathrm Mod(S_g)\to \mathrm Sp(2g, \mathbb{Z})$ is an epimorphism? [duplicate]

How do I prove that homomorphism $\phi : \; \mathrm{Mod}(S_g)\to \mathrm{Sp}(2g, \mathbb{Z})$ (induced by the action of mapping class group of a surface on integer homologies of a surface) is an ...
G.Tverisovskikh's user avatar
11 votes
1 answer
167 views

A group of type F that is an extension of type F-by-type F

Let us first recall that a group of type $F$ is a group admitting a compact classifying space. Let $K$ and $Q$ be groups of type $F$. Consider the family $\mathcal{G}(K, Q)$ consisting of groups $G$ ...
Janusz Przewocki's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
1k views

Acyclic Finite Groups

A group is called acyclic if its classifying space has the same homology of a point. Examples of acyclic groups include Higman's group with four generators and relations, also ...
Nicolas Boerger's user avatar
22 votes
1 answer
719 views

What is the cohomological dimension of the commutator subgroup of the pure braid group?

I'm interested in computing the cohomological dimension of the commutator subgroup $[P_n,P_n]$ of the pure braid group $P_n$. I wasn't able to find a reference in the literature. Because $[P_n,P_n]$ ...
David Recio-Mitter's user avatar
21 votes
2 answers
622 views

Morphism from a surface group to a symmetric group, lifted to the braid group

Let $\Sigma_g$ be the fundamental group of the closed orientable surface of genus $g\ge 2$; let $B_n$ be the braid group on $n\ge 3$ braids; let $S_n$ be the symmetric group on $n$ letters; let $p:B_n\...
Gael Meigniez's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
252 views

Monoid of continuous self-maps of (real) surfaces

Let $S$ be a closed surface of genus $g > 0$ and $[S,S] = Hom(\pi_{1}(S),\pi_{1}(S))$ be the monoid of (homotopy classes of) continuous maps from $S$ to itself. Consider the semi-group $A$ of ...
Nick L's user avatar
  • 6,995
14 votes
3 answers
683 views

Compact manifolds with big mapping class group

I was wondering if compact surfaces were the only compact manifolds with a "big" or "complicated" mapping class group. Are there higher dimensional manifolds (which are not in some way reducible to ...
Selim G's user avatar
  • 2,696
11 votes
2 answers
475 views

What is a finite Haken cover of the Seifert–Weber space?

It's known that the Seifert–Weber space (obtained from a dodecahedron by gluing opposite faces with a 3/10 turn) is an example of a non-Haken 3-manifold. Since every closed 3-manifold is virtually ...
user's user avatar
  • 113
3 votes
1 answer
267 views

In what sense is every element of $H_2(G)$ "represented by a free action on some surface"

(This is a cross-post of this unanswered math.stackexchange question) In Edmond's 1982 paper Surface Symmetry II, at the bottom of page 145, he writes: "Corollary - If $G$ is a split nonabelian ...
stupid_question_bot's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
376 views

Explicit description of a subgroup of the braid group $\mathsf{B}_2(C_2)$

This is related to my previous MathOverflow question Fundamental group of $\mathrm{Sym}^2(C_g)$ minus the diagonal. Let $C_2$ be a smooth curve of genus $2$ and $X:=\mathrm{Sym}^2(C_2)$ its second ...
Francesco Polizzi's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
456 views

Restrictions on $\pi_1(X)$ of geometric origin (Kähler groups as example)

There's and old and extensively studied question about characterisation of fundamental groups of smooth compact Kähler manifolds. Restrictions imposed by Kählerness are somewhat fragile, and if we ...
Denis T's user avatar
  • 4,600
3 votes
1 answer
432 views

Relation between conjugacy class, quotient isomorphism class, and signature of Fuchsian groups

Let $\Gamma\le SL(2,\mathbb{Z})$ be a finite index subgroup, not necessarily "congruence". Let $c_4,c_6$ be the number of conjugacy classes of elements of order 4 and 6 respectively, let $c_{-1}$ be ...
stupid_question_bot's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
257 views

Braids with an infinite number of strings

Has anyone developed a theory for braids with an infinite number of strings?
Martin Peters's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
207 views

homological 2 dimensional groups

In a Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici paper by Benno Eckman and Heinz Müller in 1980 (volume 50, pages 510-520) proved that poincaré Duality Groups of dimension 2 with positive first ...
Nicolas Boerger's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
314 views

abelian and nonabelian parts of Aut($\widehat{F_2}$)

Let $F$ be the free profinite group on two generators. Let $\text{IA}(F) := \ker\left(\text{Aut}(F)\rightarrow GL_2(\widehat{\mathbb{Z}})\right)$, the group of "IA automorphisms" of $F$. (I'm also ...
Will Chen's user avatar
  • 10.7k
13 votes
1 answer
552 views

Realizing symmetric groups by diffeomorphisms

Let $M$ be a (closed, smooth) manifold of dimension $d$. For $n$ a positive integer, fix $n$ points $x_1, \dots, x_n \in M$. The group of diffeomorphisms of $M$ that permutes the points $x_i$ surjects ...
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
536 views

Inducing up the group homomorphism between mapping class groups

There are many ways to embed the braid group into the mapping class group of a surface. To describe one of them, let ${C}_{2g+2}(\mathbb{D}^2)$ be the configuration of unordered $2g+2$ points in the ...
Sam Nariman's user avatar
  • 1,003
5 votes
2 answers
573 views

Are homotopy braid groups residually nilpotent?

A group is called residually nilpotent if given any non-identity element, there is a normal subgroup not containing that element, such that the quotient group is nilpotent. It is known that pure braid ...
Zuriel's user avatar
  • 1,108
8 votes
1 answer
382 views

Second homology of mapping class group of genus 3

In a survey paper of Korkmaz it is stated that $H_2(\mathrm{Mod}_3)$ is either $\Bbb Z$ or $\Bbb Z \oplus \Bbb Z_2$, but I was not able to find out a precise computation of this group (resolving the ...
Daniele Zuddas's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
629 views

What is known about maximal free subgroups of surface groups?

Let $\Gamma_g=< a_1,...,a_g,b_1,...,b_g | \prod_{i=1}^g [a_i,b_i]>$ (a surface group). What is known about maximal free subgroups of $\Gamma_g$ for $g>1.$ (I.e. free subgroups which are not ...
Adam's user avatar
  • 2,390
6 votes
0 answers
484 views

Does a finitely generated aspherical group have an aspherical presentation with a finite generating set?

Let $G$ be a finitely generated group. Suppose $G$ has an aspherical presentation with a countably infinite generating set. Does $G$ have an aspherical presentation with a finite generating set? Here ...
Dominik Gruber's user avatar
15 votes
2 answers
968 views

Semidirect product decomposition of the Borromean rings group

Let $X=S^3\setminus B$ be the link complement of the Borromean rings.     (source) Then $G=\pi_1(X)$ has a presentation of the form $$ G = \langle \; a,b,c \mid [a,[b^{-1},c]],\; ...
Mark Grant's user avatar
  • 35.9k
11 votes
1 answer
811 views

What is an interpretation of the relation in the cohomology of the pure braid groups?

In 1968, Arnol'd proved that the integral cohomology of the pure braid group $P_n$ is isomorphic to the exterior algebra generated by the collection of degree-one classes $\omega_{i,j}\ (1 \le i < ...
Nick Salter's user avatar
  • 2,830
10 votes
2 answers
890 views

Are virtual cubulated groups cubulated?

Suppose $G$ has a finite index subgroup $N$ such that $N$ acts properly and cocompactly on a CAT(0)-cube complex. Does $G$ also act properly and cocompactly on a CAT(0)-cube complex? Edit: After ...
Dieter's user avatar
  • 539
1 vote
1 answer
177 views

Intersections of subgroups of surface groups [closed]

Let $\mathcal{S}_g$ denote the fundamental group of an oriented surface of genus $g\ge 2$. Does $\mathcal{S}_g$ contain subgroups $A$ and $B$ of finite index such that $A\cap B = \lbrace e\rbrace$?
Mark Grant's user avatar
  • 35.9k
9 votes
3 answers
735 views

Judging whether a finitely presented group is a 3-manifold group?

Given a finitely presented group $G$, how many necessary conditions do people know for $G$ to be isomorphic to the fundamental group of some closed connected 3-manifold? (e.g. residually finite)
22 votes
2 answers
1k views

The image of the point-pushing group in the hyperelliptic representation of the braid group

Let $B_{2g+1}$ be the Artin braid group on $2g+1$ strands. There is a symplectic representation $\rho: B_{2g+1} \rightarrow Sp_{2g}(\mathbf{Z})$ called the "hyperelliptic representation," which ...
JSE's user avatar
  • 19.2k