Group presentation

WikiLast edit: 27 Jul 2016 20:02 UTC by Patrick Stevens

A presentation of a group is an object that can be viewed in two ways:

Every group has a presentation with as the set of generators, and the set of relators is the set containing every trivial word. Of course, this presentation is in general not unique: we may, for instance, add a new generator and the relator to any presentation to obtain an isomorphic presentation.

The above presentation corresponds to taking the quotient of the free group on by the homomorphism which sends a word to the product . This is an instance of the more widely-useful fact that every group is a quotient of a free group (proof).

Examples

Show solution

We have from the first relator; that is . But is the second relator, so that is ; hence and so by cancelling the rightmost . Then by cancelling the rightmost , we obtain , and hence .

But now by the first relator, ; using that both and are the identity, this tells us that ; so is trivial.

Now and so is trivial too.

finite presentation/​generation
direct products
semidirect products
  1. ^︎

    For example, if then is a set of new symbols which we may as well write .

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