Amalgam of groups
A family of groups , that satisfies the condition that the intersection
is a subgroup in
and
for any
from
. An example of an amalgam of groups is an arbitrary family of subgroups of a given group. An imbedding of an amalgam of groups
into a group
is a one-to-one mapping of the union
into
whose restriction to each
is an isomorphism. An amalgam of groups in which all intersections
are identical (and equal to, say, a subgroup
) is imbeddable in the group that is the free product of the groups
with the amalgamated subgroup
. On the other hand, there exists an amalgam of four Abelian groups that is not imbeddable in a group. The principal problem concerning amalgams of groups is, generally speaking, as follows. Let
be possible properties of groups. The question to be answered is the nature of the conditions under which an amalgam of groups with the property
is imbeddable in a group with the property
. It was found that all amalgams of two finite groups are imbeddable in a finite group. An amalgam of three Abelian groups is imbeddable in an Abelian group. An amalgam of four Abelian groups imbedded in a group is contained in an Abelian group. There exists an amalgam of five Abelian groups which is imbeddable in a group, but not in an Abelian group. Another problem that has been studied is the imbeddability of an amalgam of groups if
denote solvability, nilpotency, periodicity, local finiteness, etc. (in different combinations).
Comments
In the definition of amalgam above, think of the as all being subsets of some large set
. The amalgamated product of groups
"over a common subgroup U" is constructed as follows. Let
be a set of groups indexed by the set
. For each
let
be a subgroup of
and for each
let there be an isomorphism
identifying
and
. Consider the set
of all words
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with each from some
, and consider the following elementary equivalences
1) if then
is equivalent to
;
2) if and
belong to the same group
and
in
then
is equivalent to
;
3) if and
and
, then
is equivalent to
.
Let be the equivalence relation generated by these elementary equivalences, then
is the amalgamated product of the
, more precisely of the
(i.e. the free product with amalgamated subgroup of the
); the group law is induced by concatenation.
Amalgamated products are non-trivial. This follows from the following canonical form theorem. For each select a set
of left coset representatives of
in
. Then each word is equivalent to precisely one of the form
with each
in some
,
and
and
belonging to different
's for
. If
one obtains of course the free product of the
. A subgroup of a free product is itself a free product (Kurosh' theorem). Subgroups of a product with an amalgamated subgroup need not be themselves of this type. The reason is that if
is the amalgamated subgroup, then one can take subgroups
of the
with different intersections with
so that the
will amalgamate in various different ways. This leads to generalized amalgamated products and the notion of amalgam as defined above. The theory of these is still incomplete.
References
[a1] | M. Hall jr., "The theory of groups" , Macmillan (1959) |
[a2] | H. Neumann, "Generalized free products with amalgamated subgroups I" Amer. J. Math. , 70 (1948) pp. 590–625 |
[a3] | H. Neumann, "Generalized free products with amalgamated subgroups II" Amer. J. Math. , 71 (1949) pp. 491–540 |
Amalgam of groups. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Amalgam_of_groups&oldid=12238