All Questions
7 questions
9
votes
2
answers
738
views
Torsion-free virtually free-by-cyclic groups
Is it known if there are any examples of a finitely generated group $G$ such that:
$G$ has a finite index subgroup $H$ which is free-by-cyclic
$G$ itself is not free-by-cyclic
$G$ is torsion-free
...
8
votes
2
answers
272
views
Roller's problem on median groups
At the end of his dissertation Poc Sets, Median Algebras and Group Actions, Martin Roller asks
A group $G$ is called median if it acts freely and transitively on a median algebra. This is ...
10
votes
1
answer
246
views
Naturally occurring, non-amenable Zappa-Szep products of discrete amenable groups?
We say $G$ is the Zappa-Szep product of two subgroups $K$ and $P$ if $K\cap P = \{e\}$ and the function $K\times P \to G$, $(k,p)\mapsto kp$, is bijective.
The Iwasawa decomposition shows that we can ...
7
votes
0
answers
407
views
Linear vs smooth actions of finite groups on spheres, euclidean spaces and closed disks
I would like to know examples (with references, if possible) of the following:
(1) a finite group $G$ acting effectively and smoothly on a sphere $S^n$ (any $n$) but admitting no effective linear ...
0
votes
1
answer
363
views
Examples of groups such that order isomorphism of the subgroups of $G\times G$ and $H\times H$ does not imply isomorphism of $G$ and $H$
Let $G$ and $H$ be groups, $\operatorname{Sub}(G\times G)$ be the set of all subgroups of $G\times G$ and $\operatorname{Sub}(H\times H)$ be the set of all subgroups of $H\times H$. Assume there ...
2
votes
2
answers
862
views
Non-split groups
I am looking for a reference with definitions on what it means for an algebraic group to be split, quasi-split, and non-split. I would like to see some examples of the different "types".
Thanks,
Tom
2
votes
2
answers
1k
views
description of functions of conditionally negative type on a group
Recall that a kernel conditionaly of negative type on a set $X$ is a map $\psi:X\times X\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ with the following properties:
1) $\psi(x,x)=0$
2) $\psi(y,x)=\psi(x,y)$
3) for any ...