In
mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a presentation is one method of specifying a
group. A presentation of a group ''G'' comprises a set ''S'' of
generators—so that every element of the group can be written as a product of powers of some of these generators—and a set ''R'' of relations among those generators. We then say ''G'' has presentation
:
Informally, ''G'' has the above presentation if it is the "freest group" generated by ''S'' subject only to the relations ''R''. Formally, the group ''G'' is said to have the above presentation if it is
isomorphic
In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word is ...
to the
quotient of a
free group on ''S'' by the
normal subgroup generated by the relations ''R''.
As a simple example, the
cyclic group of order ''n'' has the presentation
:
where 1 is the group identity. This may be written equivalently as
:
thanks to the convention that terms that do not include an equals sign are taken to be equal to the group identity. Such terms are called relators, distinguishing them from the relations that do include an equals sign.
Every group has a presentation, and in fact many different presentations; a presentation is often the most compact way of describing the structure of the group.
A closely related but different concept is that of an
absolute presentation of a group.
Background
A
free group on a set ''S'' is a group where each element can be ''uniquely'' described as a finite length product of the form:
:
where the ''s
i'' are elements of S, adjacent ''s
i'' are distinct, and ''a
i'' are non-zero integers (but ''n'' may be zero). In less formal terms, the group consists of words in the generators ''and their inverses'', subject only to canceling a generator with an adjacent occurrence of its inverse.
If ''G'' is any group, and ''S'' is a generating subset of ''G'', then every element of ''G'' is also of the above form; but in general, these products will not ''uniquely'' describe an element of ''G''.
For example, the
dihedral group D
8 of order sixteen can be generated by a rotation, ''r'', of order 8; and a flip, ''f'', of order 2; and certainly any element of D
8 is a product of ''r''s and ''f''s.
However, we have, for example, , , etc., so such products are ''not unique'' in D
8. Each such product equivalence can be expressed as an equality to the identity, such as
:,
:, or
:.
Informally, we can consider these products on the left hand side as being elements of the free group , and can consider the subgroup ''R'' of ''F'' which is generated by these strings; each of which would also be equivalent to 1 when considered as products in D
8.
If we then let ''N'' be the subgroup of ''F'' generated by all conjugates ''x''
−1''Rx'' of ''R'', then it follows by definition that every element of ''N'' is a finite product ''x''
1−1''r''
1''x''
1 ... ''x
m''
−1''r
m'' ''x
m'' of members of such conjugates. It follows that each element of ''N'', when considered as a product in D
8, will also evaluate to 1; and thus that ''N'' is a normal subgroup of ''F''. Thus D
8 is isomorphic to the
quotient group
A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
. We then say that D
8 has presentation
:
Here the set of generators is , and the set of relations is . We often see ''R'' abbreviated, giving the presentation
:
An even shorter form drops the equality and identity signs, to list just the set of relators, which is . Doing this gives the presentation
:
All three presentations are equivalent.
Notation
Although the notation used in this article for a presentation is now the most common, earlier writers used different variations on the same format. Such notations include the following:
*
*
*
*
Definition
Let ''S'' be a set and let ''F
S'' be the
free group on ''S''. Let ''R'' be a set of
words on ''S'', so ''R'' naturally gives a subset of
. To form a group with presentation
, take the quotient of
by the smallest normal subgroup that contains each element of ''R''. (This subgroup is called the
normal closure ''N'' of ''R'' in
.) The group
is then defined as the
quotient group
A quotient group or factor group is a mathematical group obtained by aggregating similar elements of a larger group using an equivalence relation that preserves some of the group structure (the rest of the structure is "factored" out). For examp ...
:
The elements of ''S'' are called the generators of
and the elements of ''R'' are called the relators. A group ''G'' is said to have the presentation
if ''G'' is isomorphic to
.
It is a common practice to write relators in the form
where ''x'' and ''y'' are words on ''S''. What this means is that
. This has the intuitive meaning that the images of ''x'' and ''y'' are supposed to be equal in the quotient group. Thus, for example, ''r
n'' in the list of relators is equivalent with
.
For a finite group ''G'', it is possible to build a presentation of ''G'' from the
group multiplication table, as follows. Take ''S'' to be the set elements
of ''G'' and ''R'' to be all words of the form
, where
is an entry in the multiplication table.
Alternate definition
The definition of group presentation may alternatively be recast in terms of
equivalence class
In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
es of words on the alphabet
. In this perspective, we declare two words to be equivalent if it is possible to get from one to the other by a sequence of moves, where each move consists of adding or removing a consecutive pair
or
for some in , or by adding or removing a consecutive copy of a relator. The group elements are the equivalence classes, and the group operation is concatenation.
This point of view is particularly common in the field of
combinatorial group theory.
Finitely presented groups
A presentation is said to be
finitely generated if ''S'' is finite and finitely related if ''R'' is finite. If both are finite it is said to be a finite presentation. A group is finitely generated (respectively finitely related, ) if it has a presentation that is finitely generated (respectively finitely related, a finite presentation). A group which has a finite presentation with a single relation is called a one-relator group.
Recursively presented groups
If ''S'' is indexed by a set ''I'' consisting of all the natural numbers N or a finite subset of them, then it is easy to set up a simple one to one coding (or
Gödel numbering
In mathematical logic, a Gödel numbering is a function that assigns to each symbol and well-formed formula of some formal language a unique natural number, called its Gödel number. The concept was developed by Kurt Gödel for the proof of ...
) from the free group on ''S'' to the natural numbers, such that we can find algorithms that, given ''f''(''w''), calculate ''w'', and vice versa. We can then call a subset ''U'' of ''F
S''
recursive (respectively
recursively enumerable) if ''f''(''U'') is recursive (respectively recursively enumerable). If ''S'' is indexed as above and ''R'' recursively enumerable, then the presentation is a recursive presentation and the corresponding group is recursively presented. This usage may seem odd, but it is possible to prove that if a group has a presentation with ''R'' recursively enumerable then it has another one with ''R'' recursive.
Every finitely presented group is recursively presented, but there are recursively presented groups that cannot be finitely presented. However a theorem of
Graham Higman states that a finitely generated group has a recursive presentation if and only if it can be embedded in a finitely presented group. From this we can deduce that there are (up to isomorphism) only
countably many finitely generated recursively presented groups.
Bernhard Neumann has shown that there are
uncountably many non-isomorphic two generator groups. Therefore, there are finitely generated groups that cannot be recursively presented.
History
One of the earliest presentations of a group by generators and relations was given by the Irish mathematician
William Rowan Hamilton in 1856, in his
icosian calculus – a presentation of the
icosahedral group.
The first systematic study was given by
Walther von Dyck, student of
Felix Klein, in the early 1880s, laying the foundations for
combinatorial group theory.
Examples
The following table lists some examples of presentations for commonly studied groups. Note that in each case there are many other presentations that are possible. The presentation listed is not necessarily the most efficient one possible.
An example of a
finitely generated group that is not finitely presented is the
wreath product of the group of
integers with itself.
Some theorems
Theorem. Every group has a presentation.
To see this, given a group ''G'', consider the free group ''F
G'' on ''G''. By the
universal property of free groups, there exists a unique
group homomorphism whose restriction to ''G'' is the identity map. Let ''K'' be the
kernel of this homomorphism. Then ''K'' is normal in ''F
G'', therefore is equal to its normal closure, so . Since the identity map is surjective, ''φ'' is also surjective, so by the
First Isomorphism Theorem, . This presentation may be highly inefficient if both ''G'' and ''K'' are much larger than necessary.
Corollary. Every finite group has a finite presentation.
One may take the elements of the group for generators and the
Cayley table for relations.
Novikov–Boone theorem
The negative solution to the
word problem for groups states that there is a finite presentation for which there is no algorithm which, given two words ''u'', ''v'', decides whether ''u'' and ''v'' describe the same element in the group. This was shown by
Pyotr Novikov in 1955 and a different proof was obtained by
William Boone in 1958.
Constructions
Suppose ''G'' has presentation and ''H'' has presentation with ''S'' and ''T'' being disjoint. Then
* the
free product has presentation and
* the
direct product
In mathematics, one can often define a direct product of objects already known, giving a new one. This generalizes the Cartesian product of the underlying sets, together with a suitably defined structure on the product set. More abstractly, one ta ...
has presentation , where
'S'', ''T''means that every element from ''S'' commutes with every element from ''T'' (cf.
commutator
In mathematics, the commutator gives an indication of the extent to which a certain binary operation fails to be commutative. There are different definitions used in group theory and ring theory.
Group theory
The commutator of two elements, a ...
).
Deficiency
The deficiency of a finite presentation is just and the ''deficiency'' of a finitely presented group ''G'', denoted def(''G''), is the maximum of the deficiency over all presentations of ''G''. The deficiency of a finite group is non-positive. The
Schur multiplicator
In mathematical group theory, the Schur multiplier or Schur multiplicator is the second homology group H_2(G, \Z) of a group ''G''. It was introduced by in his work on projective representations.
Examples and properties
The Schur multiplier \oper ...
of a finite group ''G'' can be generated by −def(''G'') generators, and ''G'' is efficient if this number is required.
Geometric group theory
A presentation of a group determines a geometry, in the sense of
geometric group theory: one has the
Cayley graph, which has a
metric, called the
word metric. These are also two resulting orders, the ''weak order'' and the ''
Bruhat order'', and corresponding
Hasse diagrams. An important example is in the
Coxeter groups.
Further, some properties of this graph (the
coarse geometry) are intrinsic, meaning independent of choice of generators.
See also
*
Nielsen transformation
*
Tietze transformation
*
Presentation of a module
*
Presentation of a monoid
Notes
References
* ― This useful reference has tables of presentations of all small finite groups, the reflection groups, and so forth.
* ― Schreier's method, Nielsen's method, free presentations, subgroups and HNN extensions,
Golod–Shafarevich theorem, etc.
* ― fundamental algorithms from theoretical computer science, computational number theory, and computational commutative algebra, etc.
External links
*{{MathWorld, title=Group Presentation, id=GroupPresentation, author=
de Cornulier, YvesSmall groups and their presentations on GroupNames
Combinatorial group theory
Combinatorics on words