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00:34
The second page of the paper maths.ed.ac.uk/~v1ranick/papers/kervsmoo.pdf wrote: the trivial group and the binary icosahedral group are the only available examples of finite groups satisfying H_1(\pi) = 0 and having a presentation with an equal number of generators and relators.
Do we know other examples?
well open up some of the references in that answer?
I don't understand why you're asking
The above groups are fundamental group of homology 4-spheres. I have a question: what are the fundamental group of homology 3-spheres?
the binary icosahedral group is also the fundamental group of a homology 3-sphere
the rather famous Poincare sphere
as for the general case, who knows
It is proved in the paper that the properties $H_1(\pi) = 0$ and "having a presentation with an equal number of generators and relators" characterize the fundamental groups of homology 4-spheres. I wonder if this also characterize the fundamental groups of homology 3-spheres.
look up Thurston geometrization
@hbghlyj no, and I'm not sure if the answer to this question is known
a closed $3$-manifold is a homology sphere if and only if its $\pi_1$ is perfect (this is not hard)
the issue is that there is no known general characterization of the groups appearing as $\pi_1$ of closed $3$-manifolds (unlike for $4$-manifolds, where it's all finitely presented groups)
check out this survey to get an understanding of how complicated the situation is: math.ucla.edu/~matthias/pdf/3-manifold-groups.pdf
in particular, (C.3) says that $\pi_1$ of a closed $3$-manifold is automatically balanced (has a presentation with equal number of generators and relations) if it is infinite, so you sometimes get this for free
01:12
@Thorgott Thanks. My attempt to prove "a closed 3-manifold is a homology sphere if and only if its $π_1$ is perfect": if $\pi_1(M)=0$, by Hurwitz implies $H_1(M)=0$, then by Poincare duality $H_2(M)=0
Ok
Is there a known general characterization of the groups appearing as $π_1$ of 3-dimensional homology spheres?
Now I know that a closed $3$-manifold is a homology sphere if and only if its $\pi_1$ is perfect. But is every perfect group the fundamental group of a 3-dimensional homology sphere?
@hbghlyj correct, the only subtlety is to justify that $M$ is orientable
@hbghlyj as I just said, not to my knowledge
@hbghlyj no, there are a bunch of necessary conditions, the most obvious one being finite presentation, but see the paper I linked for more
I see. Thanks!
also, it's Hurewicz, not Hurwitz, different guys
01:36
that reminds me, in one corner of the MPI there is a framed photograph of the participants of the International Symposium on Algebraic Topology of '56 in front of the Mayan step pyramids in Uxmal with Hurewicz (still) depicted
that photograph must have been shot at most a few hours, if not minutes before his unfortunate end
oh wow
the MPI is a strange place
they also have a portrait of Hirzebruch in oil hanging in a rather central position
as you do
well, he was a rather central figure
01:53
As for my original question "Take a Morse function f on M with a single minimum and a single maximum. Then f possesses an equal number of critical points of index 1 and 2." in the paper $f$ is used to give $\pi_1(M)$ a presentation with an equal
number of generators and relators
@Thorgott true, but the painting really doesn't fit in too well with the modern style of the MPI where it hangs
If $M$ is any 3-dimensional smooth manifold, then $\pi_1(M)$ has a presentation with an equal
number of generators and relators. Is this correct?
write down some examples
My purported proof: The number of $i$-cells in $X$ is $m_i$, the number of critical points of index $i$.
There is a Morse function $f$ on $M$ with $m_0=m_3=1$.
Since $M$ is an odd-dimensional manifold, $\chi(M)=0$.
By Poicaré-Hopf, $0=\chi(M)=-m_0+m_1-m_2+m_3$, so $m_1=m_2$.
$X$ gives $\pi_1(M)$ a presentation with $m_1$ generators and $m_2$ relators.
Which step of the above proof is wrong?
you can write down a $3$-manifold with fundamental group $\mathbb{Z}$
02:04
you should probably add "closed", "connected," and perhaps "orientable"
but then it should be ok
there is some question of whether the 2-handles/cells you attach actually represent new relations
they don't
I just wanted to shift focus onto the fact that the statement is clearly wrong before worrying about why the proof doesn't work
but if the abelianization of $\pi_1$ is torsion (in particular, if $\pi_1$ is perfect), you can show the relations all have to be non-trivial
@Thorgott Yes, $S^1\times S^2$ has fundamental group $\mathbb Z$
(general fact: the deficiency of any presentation of a group $G$ is bounded above by the dimension of $G_{ab}\otimes\mathbb{Q}$)
@hbghlyj yeah, so clearly this can't be right
and the issue with the argument is, as Ben pointed out, that there may be redundancy among the relations imposed by the $2$-cells
but this does show that any $\pi_1$ of a closed orientable $3$-manifold has deficiency at least $0$
I see. Thanks!
This show that any $π_1$ of a closed orientable 3-manifold has deficiency at least 0. For the original question, how do you show that $π_1$ of a closed orientable 3-manifold with the same homology as $S^3$ has deficiency equal to 0?
02:21
I explained this just above
Let $G=\pi_1$ we have $H_1=G_{ab}$, under the assumption $H_*(M)=H_*(S^3)$ we have $H_1=0$, so $G_{ab}=0$. Is this right?
I wonder which step in the above proof of "$\pi_1$ of a closed orientable 3-manifold has deficiency at least 0" used the fact that $M$ is orientable?
after a second of thought, none
I was just being cautious, but Euler characteristic does not depend on choice of coefficients, so it works out
Ok
9
Q: Not all finitely-presented groups are fundamental groups of closed 3-manifolds

SeiriosIt is a well-known result that, for any finitely-presented group $G$ and any integer $n \geq 4$, there exists a closed $n$-manifold whose fundamental group is isomorphic to $G$ (a sketch of proof can be found here). It is also well-known that such a result becomes false when $n \leq 3$. However, ...

From this answer, the fundamental group of every
closed, connected 3-dimensional manifold has a deficiency zero presentation.
02:43
I suppose Qiaochu wants to allow redundant relations
Ok, I see.
 
7 hours later…
09:42
Is there any meaningful way to ask how many functions can I input a specific integer and get out a different specific integer?
Like any applicable definitions that might make this actually seem relevant
By definition I mean a constraint on the sort of functions that might be allowed
Or maybe would it be simpler and more apt to say how many functions don't include a specific integer ... Losing train of thought
Or maybe how many functions have a removed point at a specific integer where that removed point could have remained a function if the output were a specific different integer
Ok the last I don't think is relevant but the previous is take a vertical line at x and horizontal line for y and find out how many functions are possible?
10:31
Can you be more clear in what you're asking?
10:42
I'm trying to find out if there's potentially any worth or way in exploring a scenario where you have two distinct integers that we'll say are coincidentally related somehow & if functions could lead to some kind of interesting find if the values served as discontinuities
Say we didn't allow any x or y to be positive or negative 5 and 8 or something
 
4 hours later…
15:07
Hi everyone. I had a question: Let $A=\{1,2,3\}$. The number of relations on $A$ containing $(1,2)$ and $(2,3)$ which are reflexive and transitive but not symmetric are _______?
Should be only $1$ relation right?
$\{(1,1),(1,2),(1,3),(2,2),(2,3),(3,3)\}$?
that's the smallest one, but are you sure there aren't larger ones?
@Thorgott well (2,1) and (3,2) can't be there
oh ok wait
i was thinking antisymmetric
it's just not symmetric
right
We can add (2,1) to the set I wrote, and it would be OK
right?
same for just adding (3,2)
15:26
yes, but that's still not all
so we can independently add (21) (32) and (31)
so that's 8 cases
but we can't add all of them, so 7 cases
we've already checked 3
4 left to check
can't add only (31)
can't add (21) (31)
I think we can add (21) (32)
no we can't
nor can we add (32) (31)
@Thorgott I think those 3 are the only cases we are gonna get
others invalidate transitivity somehow
yeah I agree, you can add (21), (32) or (31)(21)
so together with the minimal one, that should yield 4
if you have (31) (21), then you can combine (31) with (12) to get (32)
so can't have that one
15:42
1<2<3, 1=2<3, 1<2=3
@Astyx could you elaborate how to convert from my question to your form? I knew equivalence relations could be counted by just counting the partitions, but this one is new to me
This is only in this specific case
You can draw a directed graph with nodes 1,2,3 and arrows 1->2 and 2->3
Now the question you are asking is what other arrows can I add until I can go from any node to any other
ya, while remaining "not symmetric"
got it now
This amounts to grouping nodes that are "equivalent"
yes
@Thorgott and @Astyx , any ideas how this can be extended to arbitrary size of $A$?
Maybe we can come up with some generic formula of $\operatorname{card}(A)$
15:48
depends with which relations, but if you keep 1<2<..<|A| the same approach should work
then it becomes a combinatorics problem
Wait how are you converting from the graph to the inequality like thingy?
if a<a+1<...<b and you can go from b to a, then a, a+1, a+2, ..., b are all equivalent
you mean the number of relations on $\{1,\dotsc,n\}$ that are reflexive, transitive, not symmetric and have $1<2<\dotsc<n$?
@Thorgott just the number of relations on $\{1,…,n\}$ that are reflexive, transitive, not symmetric
Oh
15:51
@Astyx I think I would need some time to digest that...
drawing the graph should make it clear
this shouldn't be too bad
following Astyx' logic, this is just the number of disconnected digraphs on $n$ vertices
to be clear: what I said relied on the assumption that Thor also made, i.e. 1<2<...<n
@Thorgott too much graph theory for someone who just came to know that graphs aren't just things on Desmos
15:53
graph means something different here
I will try drawing the graphs and see, anyhow
@Astyx yep
In mathematics and computer science, graph theory is the study of graphs, which are mathematical structures used to model pairwise relations between objects. A graph in this context is made up of vertices (also called nodes or points) which are connected by edges (also called arcs, links or lines). A distinction is made between undirected graphs, where edges link two vertices symmetrically, and directed graphs, where edges link two vertices asymmetrically. Graphs are one of the principal objects of study in discrete mathematics. == Definitions == Definitions in graph theory vary. The following...
@Astyx I meant that I am relatively new to graph theory
Yes I understood, which is why I emphasized that graphs in Desmos are a different mathematical notion than what I meant
hmm no, what I said is wrong, distinct digraphs can present the relation
15:55
just to avoid confusion
I was trying out with adjacency matrices previously
@Astyx oh thanks
If we have reflexivity and transitivity, we must have all the principal diagonal elements and the upper right triangle right?
ok, I think this problem reduces to the variant where we assume $1<\dotsc<n$
@Thorgott Ah got it now, so that's what having the upper right triangle means
I think I have it wrong again. Reflexivity=>Need all principal diagonal elements. Not symmetric=>Can't stop there, need at least something more
We can add just one element and be done with it, like for card=4, $\{11,22,33,44,13\}$ works
@Thorgott So I don't think that this reduction works?
the number of such relations is, I believe, $\sum_{n=k_1+\dotsc+k_m}\sum_{i=1}^m\sum_{k_i=l_1+\dotsc+l_{r_i},r_i\ge2}\#\{\text{DAGs on $r_i$ vertices}\}$
16:07
ah wait, minor error in the formula still
@Thorgott How many are you getting for $n=3$ (just with reflexivity, transitivity and not-symm criteria)?
second attempt $\sum_{n=k_1+\dotsc+k_m}\left(\sum_{r\ge1}\#\{\text{DAGs on $r$ vertices}\}\cdot\left(\sum_{i=1}^mp(k_i,r)\right)-1\right)$
is the idea of the formula to group in connected components, and for each component do the 1<..<n case?
Wait, what we need is just $\operatorname{partitions}(n)-\# (\text{only reflexive and transitive relations})$?
right?
because partitions will count all equivalence relations
@Astyx yeah, any relations generates an equivalence relation, so the first sum is over those (equivalently, their components). then, any reflexive transitive relation contains a largest equivalence relation (given by $x\le y$ and $y\le x$), so that's where the second partitions come from. then, the components over this second equivalence relation yield a connected directed acyclic graph.
I forgot to specify connected above
16:20
@SohamSaha but you want more than equivalence relations
the idea is sound, but I think I'm still not quite counting it correctly
there are symmetries playing tricks I think
@Astyx #(Ref+Symm+Transitive)-#(Ref+Transitive)=#(Ref+Transitive+not symm) right?
with a minus sign but yeah, sure
Wait minus where?
16:23
#(Ref+Symm+Transitive) is less than #(Ref+Transitive)
oh sorry yes
And then ref+symm+transitive=equivalence?
And we can count that with Bell's number?
So we only need to think about counting Ref+transitive?
@Astyx yeah, if we only count the reflexive transitive relations for simplicities' sake, the formula is $\sum_{n=k_1+\dotsc+k_m}\sum_{r\ge1}\sum_{i=1}^mp(k_i,r)\cdot\#\{\text{DAGs on $r$ vertices}\}$
but the catch is that we don't count DAGs up to isomorphism
we have to count them up to equality on the fixed vertex set $\{1,\dotsc,r\}$
and, again, I should specify them to be connected
@Astyx and @Thorgott Can't counting ref+transitive be simplified to just counting the transitives by some symmetry?
reflexivity isn't hard to take into account
@Thorgott I don't think the above formula simplifies further, but it should be efficiently computable by some recursive algorithm
16:34
@Astyx And counting transitivity seems non-trivial...
Huh, I wasn't expecting it to be that hard
the number of deleted answers to that question is truly a sight to be hold
Not enough rep
I gave the formula above, but as I said you shouldn't expect a simplification
how many deleted answers?
16:38
I think we can find a representation with A000110 and A006905
@Astyx 4
that's a nice ratio
on a post with 2 upvotes
the only thing unclear to me is whether there's a nice method of counting the number of DAGs (including symmetries, as above)
but this is no doubt something CS people have already figured out, so I don't feel like thinking about it
Should I open this up as a post on MSE?
Do you expect anything more than the MSE post you already linked?
or do you mean about relations to the OEIS sequences?
16:42
@Astyx I will see if I can get anything interesting from the sequences. And that post is only about transitive
personally, I wouldn't expect something nicer than the formula above, but I'm repeating myself
@Thorgott Sure, but there might be a nice relation with another sequence that also doesn't have a nice closed form
I suppose
then I would start by writing down a recursive algorithm computing the formula to put in the OEIS
Right
I think I should try that first
17:29
@Thorgott and @Astyx I think what we have is A000798$(n)$-A000110$(n)$
Doesn't seem to be in OEIS, though I will check superseeker once
 
4 hours later…
21:19
But a subset that has a certain property P is minimal only if it has an element, right?
 
3 hours later…
23:50
Does there exist such thing as "differentiably connected" space?
where we can guarantee that paths are differentiable
what does differentiable mean

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