On the Diophantine problem in some one-relator groups
Abstract
We study the Diophantine problem, i.e. the decision problem of solving systems of equations, for some families of one-relator groups, and provide some background for why this problem is of interest. The method used is primarily the Reidemeister--Schreier method, together with general recent results by Dahmani & Guirardel and Ciobanu, Holt & Rees on the decidability of the Diophantine problem in general classes of groups. First, we give a sample of the methods of the article by proving that the one-relator group with defining relation ambn = 1 is virtually a direct product of hyperbolic groups for all m, n ≥ 0, and thus conclude decidability of the Diophantine problem in such groups. As a corollary, we obtain that the Diophantine problem is decidable in any torus knot group. Second, we study the two-generator, one-relator groups Gm,n with defining relation a commutator [am, bn] = 1, where m, n ≥ 1. In doing so, we define and study a natural class of groups (RABSAGs), related to right-angled Artin groups (RAAGs). We reduce the Diophantine problem in the groups Gm,n to the Diophantine problem in groups which are virtually certain RABSAGs. As a corollary of our methods, we show that the submonoid membership problem is undecidable in the group G2,2 with the single defining relation [a2, b2] = 1. We use the recent classification by Gray & Howie of RAAG subgroups of one-relator groups to classify the RAAG subgroups of some RABSAGs, showing the potential usefulness of one-relator theory to this area. Finally, we define and study Newman groups NG(p,q), which are (p+1)-generated one-relator groups generalising the solvable Baumslag--Solitar groups. We show that all such groups are hyperbolic, and thereby also conclude decidability of their Diophantine problem.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.