Difference between revisions of "Butler group"
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A torsion-free [[Abelian group|Abelian group]] of finite rank (cf. [[Rank of a group|Rank of a group]]) that is a pure subgroup of a completely decomposable group of finite rank. Equivalently, a Butler group is an epimorphic image of a completely decomposable group of finite rank [[#References|[a5]]]. | A torsion-free [[Abelian group|Abelian group]] of finite rank (cf. [[Rank of a group|Rank of a group]]) that is a pure subgroup of a completely decomposable group of finite rank. Equivalently, a Butler group is an epimorphic image of a completely decomposable group of finite rank [[#References|[a5]]]. | ||
− | Clearly, all completely decomposable Abelian groups of finite rank are Butler groups, and so are their extensions by finite groups. There are lots of other examples of Butler groups. Let | + | Clearly, all completely decomposable Abelian groups of finite rank are Butler groups, and so are their extensions by finite groups. There are lots of other examples of Butler groups. Let $ A $ |
+ | be a direct sum, $ A = A _ {1} \oplus A _ {2} \oplus A _ {3} $, | ||
+ | where the $ A _ {i} $ | ||
+ | are rank-one torsion-free groups such that the elements $ a _ {i} \in A _ {i} $ | ||
+ | have characteristics $ ( \infty, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $, | ||
+ | $ ( \infty, 0, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $ | ||
+ | and $ ( 0, \infty, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $, | ||
+ | respectively. The pure subgroup $ B $ | ||
+ | of $ A $ | ||
+ | generated by the elements $ a _ {1} - a _ {2} $, | ||
+ | $ a _ {2} - a _ {3} $, | ||
+ | $ a _ {3} - a _ {1} $ | ||
+ | is a rank-two indecomposable Butler group. The class of Butler groups is closed under the formation of finite direct sums, pure subgroups and torsion-free epimorphic images. The type-set (i.e., the set of types of the non-zero elements) of a Butler group is always finite. | ||
There are various other characterizations of Butler groups. | There are various other characterizations of Butler groups. | ||
− | i) The following properties characterize Butler groups | + | i) The following properties characterize Butler groups $ B $ |
+ | among the finite-rank torsion-free groups [[#References|[a5]]]: a) the type-set of $ B $ | ||
+ | is finite; b) for each type $ t $, | ||
+ | the subgroup $ B ^ {*} ( t ) $ | ||
+ | generated by the elements of type $ > t $ | ||
+ | in $ B $ | ||
+ | has finite index in its purification $ B ^ {*} ( t ) * $; | ||
+ | c) for each type $ t $, | ||
+ | $ B ( t ) = B _ {t} \oplus B ^ {*} ( t ) * $, | ||
+ | where $ B ( t ) $ | ||
+ | is the set of elements of type $ \geq t $ | ||
+ | in $ B $ | ||
+ | and $ B _ {t} $ | ||
+ | is a homogeneous completely decomposable group of type $ t $. | ||
− | ii) A finite-rank torsion-free group | + | ii) A finite-rank torsion-free group $ B $ |
+ | is a Butler group if and only if there is a partition $ \Pi = \Pi _ {1} \cup \dots \cup \Pi _ {k} $ | ||
+ | of the set $ \Pi $ | ||
+ | of prime numbers such that for each $ i $( | ||
+ | $ i = 1 \dots k $), | ||
+ | the tensor product $ B \otimes \mathbf Z _ {i} $ | ||
+ | is a completely decomposable group with totally ordered type-set (here, $ \mathbf Z _ {i} $ | ||
+ | denotes the localization of $ \mathbf Z $ | ||
+ | at the set $ \Pi _ {i} $ | ||
+ | of primes) [[#References|[a3]]]. | ||
− | iii) A finite-rank torsion-free group | + | iii) A finite-rank torsion-free group $ B $ |
+ | is Butler exactly if it satisfies $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ | ||
+ | for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $[[#References|[a4]]]. Here, $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} $ | ||
+ | denotes the group of equivalence classes of extensions of $ T $ | ||
+ | by $ B $ | ||
+ | in which $ T $ | ||
+ | is a balanced subgroup. | ||
− | The classification of Butler groups has not gotten too far (1996). Two important classes have been characterized by invariants up to quasi-isomorphism. These are the Butler groups of Richman type [[#References|[a13]]] and their duals. (A Butler group | + | The classification of Butler groups has not gotten too far (1996). Two important classes have been characterized by invariants up to quasi-isomorphism. These are the Butler groups of Richman type [[#References|[a13]]] and their duals. (A Butler group $ B $ |
+ | is of Richman type if it is a corank-one pure subgroup in a completely decomposable group of finite rank. See [[#References|[a2]]], [[#References|[a10]]], [[#References|[a11]]].) | ||
It is worthwhile mentioning that there is a close connection between Butler groups and representations of finite partially ordered sets. | It is worthwhile mentioning that there is a close connection between Butler groups and representations of finite partially ordered sets. | ||
− | Butler groups | + | Butler groups $ B $ |
+ | of countable rank were introduced in [[#References|[a4]]]. Of the numerous equivalent characterizations, the following are noteworthy: | ||
− | i) | + | i) $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ |
+ | for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $; | ||
− | ii) | + | ii) $ B $ |
+ | is the union of an ascending chain of (finite-rank) Butler subgroups which are pure in $ B $; | ||
− | iii) every finite-rank pure subgroup of | + | iii) every finite-rank pure subgroup of $ B $ |
+ | is a Butler group. | ||
− | The study of Butler groups of large cardinalities often requires additional set-theoretical hypotheses beyond the axioms of ZFC (cf. [[Set theory|Set theory]]). There are two kinds of Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality [[#References|[a4]]]: | + | The study of Butler groups of large cardinalities often requires additional set-theoretical hypotheses beyond the axioms of ZFC (cf. [[Set theory|Set theory]]). There are two kinds of Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality [[#References|[a4]]]: $ B $ |
+ | is a $ B _ {1} $- | ||
+ | group if $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ | ||
+ | for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $, | ||
+ | and a $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | group if it is the union of a continuous well-ordered ascending chain of pure subgroups $ B _ \alpha $ | ||
+ | such that, for all $ \alpha $, | ||
+ | $ B _ {\alpha + 1 } = B _ \alpha + G _ \alpha $ | ||
+ | for some finite-rank Butler group $ G _ \alpha $. | ||
+ | All $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | groups are $ B _ {1} $- | ||
+ | groups, and the converse is one of the major open problems in Abelian group theory. It is known that the [[Continuum hypothesis|continuum hypothesis]], CH, guarantees that all $ B _ {1} $- | ||
+ | groups of cardinality $ \leq \aleph _ \omega $ | ||
+ | are $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | groups [[#References|[a6]]], while in Gödel's constructible universe $ L $( | ||
+ | cf. also [[Gödel constructive set|Gödel constructive set]]), the same holds without cardinality restrictions [[#References|[a9]]]. A useful criterion is: assuming CH, a $ B _ {1} $- | ||
+ | group $ B $ | ||
+ | is a $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | group if and only if $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} ( B,T ) = 0 $ | ||
+ | for all torsion groups $ T $[[#References|[a12]]]. | ||
− | The other important problem is to find conditions under which a [[Pure subgroup|pure subgroup]] | + | The other important problem is to find conditions under which a [[Pure subgroup|pure subgroup]] $ A $ |
+ | of a $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | group $ B $ | ||
+ | is likewise a $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | group. A necessary and sufficient condition is the existence of a continuous well-ordered ascending chain of $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | subgroups from $ A $ | ||
+ | to $ B $ | ||
+ | with rank- $ 1 $ | ||
+ | factors [[#References|[a8]]]. A related problem is whether or not $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} ( G,T ) = 0 $ | ||
+ | for all torsion-free groups $ G $ | ||
+ | and all torsion groups $ T $. | ||
+ | In [[#References|[a7]]] it is shown that CH is a necessary condition for the vanishing of $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} $, | ||
+ | while in [[#References|[a9]]] it is proved that the hypothesis $ V = L $ | ||
+ | is a sufficient condition. It should be pointed out that $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {3} ( G,T ) $ | ||
+ | always vanishes, provided CH is assumed [[#References|[a1]]]; more generally, $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {n + 2 } ( G,T ) $ | ||
+ | vanishes if $ \aleph _ {n} $ | ||
+ | is the continuum for some integer $ n \geq 1 $[[#References|[a8]]]. Another useful result, valid in ZFC, states that in a balanced-projective resolution $ 0 \rightarrow K \rightarrow C \rightarrow B \rightarrow 0 $ | ||
+ | of a $ B _ {1} $- | ||
+ | group $ B $( | ||
+ | i.e., $ C $ | ||
+ | is completely decomposable and $ K $ | ||
+ | is balanced in $ C $), | ||
+ | if one of $ B $, | ||
+ | $ K $ | ||
+ | is a $ B _ {2} $- | ||
+ | group, then so is the other [[#References|[a8]]]. | ||
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
<table><TR><TD valign="top">[a1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> U. Albrecht, P. Hill, "Butler groups of infinite rank and Axiom 3" ''Czechosl. Math. J.'' , '''37''' (1987) pp. 293–309</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Arnold, C. Vinsonhaler, "Invariants for a class of torsion-free abelian groups" ''Proc. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''105''' (1989) pp. 293–300</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Bican, "Purely finitely generated abelian groups" ''Comment. Math. Univ. Carolin.'' , '''21''' (1980) pp. 209–218</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a4]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Bican, L. Salce, "Butler groups of infinite rank" , ''Abelian Group Theory'' , ''Lecture Notes in Mathematics'' , '''1006''' , Springer (1983) pp. 171–189</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a5]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M.C.R. Butler, "A class of torsion-free abelian groups of finite rank" ''Proc. London Math. Soc.'' , '''15''' (1965) pp. 680–698</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a6]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M. Dugas, P. Hill, K.M Rangaswamy, "Infinite rank Butler groups II" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''320''' (1990) pp. 643–664</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a7]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M. Dugas, B. Thomé, "The functor Bext and the negation of CH" ''Forum Math.'' , '''3''' (1991) pp. 23–33</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a8]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, "Butler groups of infinite rank" ''J. Pure Appl. Algebra'' , '''98''' (1995) pp. 25–44</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a9]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, M. Magidor, "Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality" ''Israel J. Math.'' , '''84''' (1993) pp. 239–263</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a10]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, C. Metelli, "On a class of Butler groups" ''Manuscr. Math.'' , '''71''' (1991) pp. 1–28</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a11]</TD> <TD valign="top"> P. Hill, C. Megibben, "The classification of certain Butler groups" ''J. Algebra'' , '''160''' (1993) pp. 524–551</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a12]</TD> <TD valign="top"> K.M. Rangaswamy, "A homological characterization of Butler groups" ''Proc. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''121''' (1994) pp. 409–415</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a13]</TD> <TD valign="top"> F. Richman, "An extension of the theory of completely decomposable torsion-free abelian groups" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''279''' (1983) pp. 175–185</TD></TR></table> | <table><TR><TD valign="top">[a1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> U. Albrecht, P. Hill, "Butler groups of infinite rank and Axiom 3" ''Czechosl. Math. J.'' , '''37''' (1987) pp. 293–309</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Arnold, C. Vinsonhaler, "Invariants for a class of torsion-free abelian groups" ''Proc. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''105''' (1989) pp. 293–300</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Bican, "Purely finitely generated abelian groups" ''Comment. Math. Univ. Carolin.'' , '''21''' (1980) pp. 209–218</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a4]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Bican, L. Salce, "Butler groups of infinite rank" , ''Abelian Group Theory'' , ''Lecture Notes in Mathematics'' , '''1006''' , Springer (1983) pp. 171–189</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a5]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M.C.R. Butler, "A class of torsion-free abelian groups of finite rank" ''Proc. London Math. Soc.'' , '''15''' (1965) pp. 680–698</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a6]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M. Dugas, P. Hill, K.M Rangaswamy, "Infinite rank Butler groups II" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''320''' (1990) pp. 643–664</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a7]</TD> <TD valign="top"> M. Dugas, B. Thomé, "The functor Bext and the negation of CH" ''Forum Math.'' , '''3''' (1991) pp. 23–33</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a8]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, "Butler groups of infinite rank" ''J. Pure Appl. Algebra'' , '''98''' (1995) pp. 25–44</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a9]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, M. Magidor, "Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality" ''Israel J. Math.'' , '''84''' (1993) pp. 239–263</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a10]</TD> <TD valign="top"> L. Fuchs, C. Metelli, "On a class of Butler groups" ''Manuscr. Math.'' , '''71''' (1991) pp. 1–28</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a11]</TD> <TD valign="top"> P. Hill, C. Megibben, "The classification of certain Butler groups" ''J. Algebra'' , '''160''' (1993) pp. 524–551</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a12]</TD> <TD valign="top"> K.M. Rangaswamy, "A homological characterization of Butler groups" ''Proc. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''121''' (1994) pp. 409–415</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[a13]</TD> <TD valign="top"> F. Richman, "An extension of the theory of completely decomposable torsion-free abelian groups" ''Trans. Amer. Math. Soc.'' , '''279''' (1983) pp. 175–185</TD></TR></table> |
Revision as of 06:29, 30 May 2020
A torsion-free Abelian group of finite rank (cf. Rank of a group) that is a pure subgroup of a completely decomposable group of finite rank. Equivalently, a Butler group is an epimorphic image of a completely decomposable group of finite rank [a5].
Clearly, all completely decomposable Abelian groups of finite rank are Butler groups, and so are their extensions by finite groups. There are lots of other examples of Butler groups. Let $ A $ be a direct sum, $ A = A _ {1} \oplus A _ {2} \oplus A _ {3} $, where the $ A _ {i} $ are rank-one torsion-free groups such that the elements $ a _ {i} \in A _ {i} $ have characteristics $ ( \infty, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $, $ ( \infty, 0, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $ and $ ( 0, \infty, \infty, 0, 0, \dots ) $, respectively. The pure subgroup $ B $ of $ A $ generated by the elements $ a _ {1} - a _ {2} $, $ a _ {2} - a _ {3} $, $ a _ {3} - a _ {1} $ is a rank-two indecomposable Butler group. The class of Butler groups is closed under the formation of finite direct sums, pure subgroups and torsion-free epimorphic images. The type-set (i.e., the set of types of the non-zero elements) of a Butler group is always finite.
There are various other characterizations of Butler groups.
i) The following properties characterize Butler groups $ B $ among the finite-rank torsion-free groups [a5]: a) the type-set of $ B $ is finite; b) for each type $ t $, the subgroup $ B ^ {*} ( t ) $ generated by the elements of type $ > t $ in $ B $ has finite index in its purification $ B ^ {*} ( t ) * $; c) for each type $ t $, $ B ( t ) = B _ {t} \oplus B ^ {*} ( t ) * $, where $ B ( t ) $ is the set of elements of type $ \geq t $ in $ B $ and $ B _ {t} $ is a homogeneous completely decomposable group of type $ t $.
ii) A finite-rank torsion-free group $ B $ is a Butler group if and only if there is a partition $ \Pi = \Pi _ {1} \cup \dots \cup \Pi _ {k} $ of the set $ \Pi $ of prime numbers such that for each $ i $( $ i = 1 \dots k $), the tensor product $ B \otimes \mathbf Z _ {i} $ is a completely decomposable group with totally ordered type-set (here, $ \mathbf Z _ {i} $ denotes the localization of $ \mathbf Z $ at the set $ \Pi _ {i} $ of primes) [a3].
iii) A finite-rank torsion-free group $ B $ is Butler exactly if it satisfies $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $[a4]. Here, $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} $ denotes the group of equivalence classes of extensions of $ T $ by $ B $ in which $ T $ is a balanced subgroup.
The classification of Butler groups has not gotten too far (1996). Two important classes have been characterized by invariants up to quasi-isomorphism. These are the Butler groups of Richman type [a13] and their duals. (A Butler group $ B $ is of Richman type if it is a corank-one pure subgroup in a completely decomposable group of finite rank. See [a2], [a10], [a11].)
It is worthwhile mentioning that there is a close connection between Butler groups and representations of finite partially ordered sets.
Butler groups $ B $ of countable rank were introduced in [a4]. Of the numerous equivalent characterizations, the following are noteworthy:
i) $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $;
ii) $ B $ is the union of an ascending chain of (finite-rank) Butler subgroups which are pure in $ B $;
iii) every finite-rank pure subgroup of $ B $ is a Butler group.
The study of Butler groups of large cardinalities often requires additional set-theoretical hypotheses beyond the axioms of ZFC (cf. Set theory). There are two kinds of Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality [a4]: $ B $ is a $ B _ {1} $- group if $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {1} ( B,T ) = 0 $ for all torsion Abelian groups $ T $, and a $ B _ {2} $- group if it is the union of a continuous well-ordered ascending chain of pure subgroups $ B _ \alpha $ such that, for all $ \alpha $, $ B _ {\alpha + 1 } = B _ \alpha + G _ \alpha $ for some finite-rank Butler group $ G _ \alpha $. All $ B _ {2} $- groups are $ B _ {1} $- groups, and the converse is one of the major open problems in Abelian group theory. It is known that the continuum hypothesis, CH, guarantees that all $ B _ {1} $- groups of cardinality $ \leq \aleph _ \omega $ are $ B _ {2} $- groups [a6], while in Gödel's constructible universe $ L $( cf. also Gödel constructive set), the same holds without cardinality restrictions [a9]. A useful criterion is: assuming CH, a $ B _ {1} $- group $ B $ is a $ B _ {2} $- group if and only if $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} ( B,T ) = 0 $ for all torsion groups $ T $[a12].
The other important problem is to find conditions under which a pure subgroup $ A $ of a $ B _ {2} $- group $ B $ is likewise a $ B _ {2} $- group. A necessary and sufficient condition is the existence of a continuous well-ordered ascending chain of $ B _ {2} $- subgroups from $ A $ to $ B $ with rank- $ 1 $ factors [a8]. A related problem is whether or not $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} ( G,T ) = 0 $ for all torsion-free groups $ G $ and all torsion groups $ T $. In [a7] it is shown that CH is a necessary condition for the vanishing of $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {2} $, while in [a9] it is proved that the hypothesis $ V = L $ is a sufficient condition. It should be pointed out that $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {3} ( G,T ) $ always vanishes, provided CH is assumed [a1]; more generally, $ { \mathop{\rm Bext} } ^ {n + 2 } ( G,T ) $ vanishes if $ \aleph _ {n} $ is the continuum for some integer $ n \geq 1 $[a8]. Another useful result, valid in ZFC, states that in a balanced-projective resolution $ 0 \rightarrow K \rightarrow C \rightarrow B \rightarrow 0 $ of a $ B _ {1} $- group $ B $( i.e., $ C $ is completely decomposable and $ K $ is balanced in $ C $), if one of $ B $, $ K $ is a $ B _ {2} $- group, then so is the other [a8].
References
[a1] | U. Albrecht, P. Hill, "Butler groups of infinite rank and Axiom 3" Czechosl. Math. J. , 37 (1987) pp. 293–309 |
[a2] | D. Arnold, C. Vinsonhaler, "Invariants for a class of torsion-free abelian groups" Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. , 105 (1989) pp. 293–300 |
[a3] | L. Bican, "Purely finitely generated abelian groups" Comment. Math. Univ. Carolin. , 21 (1980) pp. 209–218 |
[a4] | L. Bican, L. Salce, "Butler groups of infinite rank" , Abelian Group Theory , Lecture Notes in Mathematics , 1006 , Springer (1983) pp. 171–189 |
[a5] | M.C.R. Butler, "A class of torsion-free abelian groups of finite rank" Proc. London Math. Soc. , 15 (1965) pp. 680–698 |
[a6] | M. Dugas, P. Hill, K.M Rangaswamy, "Infinite rank Butler groups II" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 320 (1990) pp. 643–664 |
[a7] | M. Dugas, B. Thomé, "The functor Bext and the negation of CH" Forum Math. , 3 (1991) pp. 23–33 |
[a8] | L. Fuchs, "Butler groups of infinite rank" J. Pure Appl. Algebra , 98 (1995) pp. 25–44 |
[a9] | L. Fuchs, M. Magidor, "Butler groups of arbitrary cardinality" Israel J. Math. , 84 (1993) pp. 239–263 |
[a10] | L. Fuchs, C. Metelli, "On a class of Butler groups" Manuscr. Math. , 71 (1991) pp. 1–28 |
[a11] | P. Hill, C. Megibben, "The classification of certain Butler groups" J. Algebra , 160 (1993) pp. 524–551 |
[a12] | K.M. Rangaswamy, "A homological characterization of Butler groups" Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. , 121 (1994) pp. 409–415 |
[a13] | F. Richman, "An extension of the theory of completely decomposable torsion-free abelian groups" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 279 (1983) pp. 175–185 |
Butler group. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Butler_group&oldid=46178