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Questions designed to generate a "big list" of certain results, examples, conjectures, etc. via many individual answers, each contributing one or a few instances. Such a question should typically be in Community Wiki mode (CW); after asking, please, flag for moderators attention requesting the question to be made CW.

47 votes

Most interesting mathematics mistake?

Not just a great mistake, but also a great documentation of a mistake: Stallings's How not to prove the Poincaré Conjecture.1 (I think this paper is my answer to every community-wiki question.) 1Here …
LSpice's user avatar
  • 12.9k
10 votes

Results from abstract algebra which look wrong (but are true)

Let $F$ be a non-abelian free group and let $G=\prod_\omega F$ be the direct product of infinitely many copies of $F$. Then the abelianisation of $G$ has torsion (of order $2$), by a theorem of Kharla …
LSpice's user avatar
  • 12.9k
17 votes

How helpful is non-standard analysis?

The asymptotic cone of a metric space (and hence of a finitely generated group endowed with the word metric) is constructed using non-standard analysis, and has been used to prove many nice theorems. …
Martin Sleziak's user avatar
5 votes

Fixed point theorems

The main theorem of Smith theory asserts that if a $p$-group $G$ acts on a mod-$p$-acyclic space $X$ (which must also be 'finitistic', a fairly weak condition), then the fixed point set $X^G$ is also …
Martin Sleziak's user avatar
17 votes

Applications of the notion of of Gromov-Hausdorff distance

Gromov's Theorem was, as far as I'm aware, the first but very far from the last application of Gromov–Hausdorff distance to group theory. One particularly fruitful line of reasoning starts with a seq …
Martin Sleziak's user avatar
1 vote

Examples of results first proved using geometrical methods?

I gave an example here of a topological proof that a product of two commutators in a free group is not itself always a commutator. In answer to the same question, Arturo Magidin indicated how to give …
YCor's user avatar
  • 63.9k
43 votes

What are some of the big open problems in 3-manifold theory?

ADDED (29 May, 2013) As has been pointed out in the comments, there has been great progress since this answer was first written, and the conjectures below have now been proved, thanks to ground-breaki …
Martin Sleziak's user avatar
11 votes

Examples of residually-finite groups

It's perhaps worth mentioning a powerful construction of finitely presented residually finite groups due to Bridson--Grunewald (though the residual finiteness comes from work of Wise). Wise produced a …
Community's user avatar
  • 1
6 votes

Most important mathematical results in last 30 years

Perelman's proof of the Geometrization conjecture (see here, here and here) was the crowning achievement of decades of work. It was the most important of Thurston's conjectures about the topology of …
HJRW's user avatar
  • 25.2k
5 votes

Most important mathematical results in last 30 years

Agol's proof of the Virtual Haken conjecture was a wonderful application of the tools developed by Wise and his coauthors in geometric group theory to 3-manifold topology. The Virtual Haken conjectur …
HJRW's user avatar
  • 25.2k
3 votes

Most important mathematical results in last 30 years

Kahn--Markovic's proofs of the Surface Subgroup conjecture and the Ehrenpreis conjecture.
HJRW's user avatar
  • 25.2k
3 votes

Geometric or topological results from group theory

I'm still a little uncertain about this question, but I'll try to say something about the Virtual Haken conjecture (discussed above) and in the process explain why I think it's a good example. The Vi …
HJRW's user avatar
  • 25.2k
17 votes

A single paper everyone should read?

Stallings's How Not To Prove the Poincare Conjecture (cached at Citeseer) is the funniest paper I've ever read.
Todd Trimble's user avatar
  • 53.3k
10 votes

Research-level mathematical bookstores

I haven't been there in a while, but Foyles (in London) used to have an excellent selection of mathematics books.
Marcus Johnson's user avatar
15 votes
Accepted

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

Apologies for the shameless self-promotion, but as you ask for necessary conditions, you seem to want a list of theorems of the form 'If G is a 3-manifold group then G has property P'. Aschenbrenner, …
Neil Strickland's user avatar

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