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In mathematics, group cohomology is a set of mathematical tools used to study groups using cohomology theory, a technique from algebraic topology. Analogous to group representations, group cohomology looks at the group actions of a group G in an associated G-module M to elucidate the properties of the group.
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When is the restriction map $res:H^2(G,U(1))\to H^2(Z_p\times Z_p,U(1))$ not the zero map?
Consider $G$ to be a finite group with non-trivial Schur Multipler $H^2(G,U(1))$, where $G$ acts trivially on the circle group $U(1)$.
By Example of a Schur-nontrivial group with no abelian subgroup …
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Example of a Schur-nontrivial group with no abelian subgroup of the form $H\times H$?
A group $G$ is Schur-nontrivial if the Schur multipler $H^2(G,U(1))$ is not the trivial group.
I am trying to find an example of a Schur-nontrivial group which does not contain a subgroup of the form …