Howson property

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In the mathematical subject of group theory, the Howson property, also known as the finitely generated intersection property (FGIP), is the property of a group saying that the intersection of any two finitely generated subgroups of this group is again finitely generated. The property is named after Albert G. Howson who in a 1954 paper established that free groups have this property.[1]

Formal definition

A group is said to have the Howson property if for every finitely generated subgroups of their intersection is again a finitely generated subgroup of .[2]

Examples and non-examples

See also

References

  1. ^ A. G. Howson, On the intersection of finitely generated free groups.
    Journal of the London Mathematical Society
    29 (1954), 428–434
  2. ^ O. Bogopolski, Introduction to group theory. Translated, revised and expanded from the 2002 Russian original. EMS Textbooks in Mathematics. European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, 2008. ; p. 102
  3. ^ a b D. I. Moldavanskii, The intersection of finitely generated subgroups (in Russian) Siberian Mathematical Journal 9 (1968), 1422–1426
  4. ^ L. Greenberg, Discrete groups of motions. Canadian Journal of Mathematics 12 (1960), 415–426
  5. ^ R. G. Burns and A. M. Brunner, Two remarks on the group property of Howson, Algebra i Logika 18 (1979), 513–522
  6. ^ a b T. Soma, 3-manifold groups with the finitely generated intersection property, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 331 (1992), no. 2, 761–769
  7. ^ V. Araújo, P. Silva, M. Sykiotis, Finiteness results for subgroups of finite extensions. Journal of Algebra 423 (2015), 592–614
  8. Journal of the London Mathematical Society
    41 (1966), 673–679
  9. ^ D. E. Cohen, Finitely generated subgroups of amalgamated free products and HNN groups. J. Austral. Math. Soc. Ser. A 22 (1976), no. 3, 274–281
  10. ^ R. G. Burns, On the finitely generated subgroups of an amalgamated product of two groups. Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 169 (1972), 293–306
  11. ^ H. Servatius, C. Droms, B. Servatius, The finite basis extension property and graph groups. Topology and combinatorial group theory (Hanover, NH, 1986/1987; Enfield, NH, 1988), 52–58, Lecture Notes in Math., 1440, Springer, Berlin, 1990
  12. ^ F. Dahmani, Combination of convergence groups. Geometry & Topology 7 (2003), 933–963
  13. ^ a b D. D. Long and A. W. Reid, Small Subgroups of , Experimental Mathematics, 20(4):412–425, 2011
  14. ^ J. P. McCammond, D. T. Wise, Coherence, local quasiconvexity, and the perimeter of 2-complexes. Geometric and Functional Analysis 15 (2005), no. 4, 859–927
  15. ^ P. Schupp, Coxeter groups, 2-completion, perimeter reduction and subgroup separability, Geometriae Dedicata 96 (2003) 179–198
  16. ^ G. Ch. Hruska, D. T. Wise, Towers, ladders and the B. B. Newman spelling theorem.
    Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society
    71 (2001), no. 1, 53–69
  17. ^ A. V. Rozhkov, Centralizers of elements in a group of tree automorphisms. (in Russian) Izv. Ross. Akad. Nauk Ser. Mat. 57 (1993), no. 6, 82–105; translation in: Russian Acad. Sci. Izv. Math. 43 (1993), no. 3, 471–492
  18. ; Theorem 10.4.13 on p. 236
  19. ; Theorem 9.1.20 on p. 366
  20. ^ G. N. Arzhantseva, Generic properties of finitely presented groups and Howson's theorem. Communications in Algebra 26 (1998), no. 11, 3783–3792
  21. ^ A. S. Kirkinski, Intersections of finitely generated subgroups in metabelian groups. Algebra i Logika 20 (1981), no. 1, 37–54; Lemma 3.
  22. ^ V. Guba and M. Sapir, On subgroups of R. Thompson's group and other diagram groups.
    Sbornik: Mathematics
    190.8 (1999): 1077-1130; Corollary 20.