Adian–Rabin theorem

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In the mathematical subject of group theory, the Adian–Rabin theorem is a result that states that most "reasonable" properties of finitely presentable groups are algorithmically undecidable. The theorem is due to Sergei Adian (1955)[1][2] and, independently, Michael O. Rabin (1958).[3]

Markov property

A Markov property P of finitely presentable groups is one for which:

  1. P is an abstract property, that is, P is preserved under group isomorphism.
  2. There exists a finitely presentable group with property P.
  3. There exists a finitely presentable group that cannot be embedded as a subgroup in any finitely presentable group with property P.

For example, being a finite group is a Markov property: We can take to be the trivial group and we can take to be the infinite cyclic group .

Precise statement of the Adian–Rabin theorem

In modern sources, the Adian–Rabin theorem is usually stated as follows:[4][5][6]

Let P be a Markov property of finitely presentable groups. Then there does not exist an algorithm that, given a finite presentation , decides whether or not the group defined by this presentation has property P.

The word 'algorithm' here is used in the sense of

recursion theory
. More formally, the conclusion of the Adian–Rabin theorem means that set of all finite presentations

(where is a fixed countably infinite alphabet, and is a finite set of relations in these generators and their inverses) defining groups with property P, is not a

recursive set
.

Historical notes

The statement of the Adian–Rabin theorem generalizes a similar earlier result for

Markov processes
are named.

According to Don Collins,[9] the notion Markov property, as defined above, was introduced by William Boone in his Mathematical Reviews review of Rabin's 1958 paper containing Rabin's proof of the Adian–Rabin theorem.

Idea of the proof

In modern sources,

amalgamated products and HNN extensions
.

Let be a Markov property and let be as in the definition of the Markov property above. Let be a finitely presented group with undecidable word problem, whose existence is provided by the

Novikov–Boone theorem
.

The proof then produces a recursive procedure that, given a word in the generators of , outputs a finitely presented group such that if then is isomorphic to , and if then contains as a subgroup. Thus has property if and only if . Since it is undecidable whether , it follows that it is undecidable whether a finitely presented group has property .

Applications

The following properties of finitely presented groups are Markov and therefore are algorithmically undecidable by the Adian–Rabin theorem:

  1. Being the trivial group.
  2. Being a finite group.
  3. Being an abelian group.
  4. Being a free group.
  5. Being a nilpotent group.
  6. Being a solvable group.
  7. Being a amenable group.
  8. Being a
    word-hyperbolic group
    .
  9. Being a
    torsion-free group
    .
  10. Being a polycyclic group.
  11. Being a group with a solvable word problem.
  12. Being a residually finite group.
  13. Being a group of finite cohomological dimension.
  14. Being an automatic group.
  15. Being a simple group. (One can take to be the trivial group and to be a finitely presented group with unsolvable word problem whose existence is provided by the
    Kuznetsov's theorem
    implies that does not embed into any finitely presentable simple group. Hence being a finitely presentable simple group is a Markov property.)
  16. Being a group of finite asymptotic dimension.
  17. Being a group admitting a uniform embedding into a Hilbert space.

Note that the Adian–Rabin theorem also implies that the complement of a Markov property in the class of finitely presentable groups is algorithmically undecidable. For example, the properties of being nontrivial, infinite, nonabelian, etc., for finitely presentable groups are undecidable. However, there do exist examples of interesting undecidable properties such that neither these properties nor their complements are Markov. Thus Collins (1969) [9] proved that the property of being Hopfian is undecidable for finitely presentable groups, while neither being Hopfian nor being non-Hopfian are Markov.

See also

References

Further reading