4,278 research outputs found
Virtually splitting the map from Aut(G) to Out(G)
We give an elementary criterion on a group G for the map from Aut(G) to
Out(G) to split virtually. This criterion applies to many residually finite
CAT(0) groups and hyperbolic groups, and in particular to all finitely
generated Coxeter groups. As a consequence the outer automorphism group of any
finitely generated Coxeter group is residually finite and virtually
torsion-free.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
The automorphism group of accessible groups
In this article, we study the outer automorphism group of a group G
decomposed as a finite graph of group with finite edge groups and finitely
generated vertex groups with at most one end. We show that Out(G) is
essentially obtained by taking extensions of relative automorphism groups of
vertex groups, groups of Dehn twists and groups of automorphisms of free
products. We apply this description and obtain a criterion for Out(G) to be
finitely presented, as well as a necessary and sufficient condition for Out(G)
to be finite. Consequences for hyperbolic groups are discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures. Section 4 rewritten and corrected, added
reference
Realms: A Structure for Consolidating Knowledge about Mathematical Theories
Since there are different ways of axiomatizing and developing a mathematical
theory, knowledge about a such a theory may reside in many places and in many
forms within a library of formalized mathematics. We introduce the notion of a
realm as a structure for consolidating knowledge about a mathematical theory. A
realm contains several axiomatizations of a theory that are separately
developed. Views interconnect these developments and establish that the
axiomatizations are equivalent in the sense of being mutually interpretable. A
realm also contains an external interface that is convenient for users of the
library who want to apply the concepts and facts of the theory without delving
into the details of how the concepts and facts were developed. We illustrate
the utility of realms through a series of examples. We also give an outline of
the mechanisms that are needed to create and maintain realms.Comment: As accepted for CICM 201
Locally compact convergence groups and n-transitive actions
All sigma-compact, locally compact groups acting sharply n-transitively and
continuously on compact spaces M have been classified, except for n=2,3 when M
is infinite and disconnected. We show that no such actions exist for n=2 and
that these actions for n=3 coincide with the action of a hyperbolic group on a
space equivariantly homeomorphic to its hyperbolic boundary. We further give a
characterization of non-compact groups acting 3-properly and transitively on
infinite compact sets as non-elementary boundary transitive hyperbolic groups.
The main tool is a generalization to locally compact groups of Bowditch's
topological characterization of hyperbolic groups. Finally, in contrast to the
case n=3, we show that for n>3, if a locally compact group acts continuously,
n-properly and n-cocompactly on a locally connected metrizable compactum M,
then M has a local cut point
Isotope shift on the chlorine electron affinity revisited by an MCHF/CI approach
Today, the electron affinity is experimentally well known for most of the
elements and is a useful guideline for developing ab initio computational
methods. However, the measurements of isotope shifts on the electron affinity
are limited by both resolution and sensitivity. In this context, theory
eventually contributes to the knowledge and understanding of atomic structures,
even though correlation plays a dominant role in negative ions properties and,
particularly, in the calculation of the specific mass shift contribution. The
present study solves the longstanding discrepancy between calculated and
measured specific mass shifts on the electron affinity of chlorine (Phys. Rev.
A 51 (1995) 231)Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, 7 table
Spectral rigidity of automorphic orbits in free groups
It is well-known that a point in the (unprojectivized)
Culler-Vogtmann Outer space is uniquely determined by its
\emph{translation length function} . A subset of a
free group is called \emph{spectrally rigid} if, whenever
are such that for every then in . By
contrast to the similar questions for the Teichm\"uller space, it is known that
for there does not exist a finite spectrally rigid subset of .
In this paper we prove that for if is a subgroup
that projects to an infinite normal subgroup in then the -orbit
of an arbitrary nontrivial element is spectrally rigid. We also
establish a similar statement for , provided that is not
conjugate to a power of .
We also include an appended corrigendum which gives a corrected proof of
Lemma 5.1 about the existence of a fully irreducible element in an infinite
normal subgroup of of . Our original proof of Lemma 5.1 relied on a
subgroup classification result of Handel-Mosher, originally stated by
Handel-Mosher for arbitrary subgroups . After our paper was
published, it turned out that the proof of the Handel-Mosher subgroup
classification theorem needs the assumption that be finitely generated. The
corrigendum provides an alternative proof of Lemma~5.1 which uses the
corrected, finitely generated, version of the Handel-Mosher theorem and relies
on the 0-acylindricity of the action of on the free factor complex
(due to Bestvina-Mann-Reynolds). A proof of 0-acylindricity is included in the
corrigendum.Comment: Included a corrigendum which gives a corrected proof of Lemma 5.1
about the existence of a fully irreducible element in an infinite normal
subgroup of of Out(F_N). Note that, because of the arXiv rules, the
corrigendum and the original article are amalgamated into a single pdf file,
with the corrigendum appearing first, followed by the main body of the
original articl
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