Groups acting on trees with Tits' independence property (P)
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 15:15 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Closed group actions on trees with Tits independence property (P) decompose into and reconstruct from local action diagrams.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In this article we give a full classification and description of all closed group actions on trees with Tits' independence property (P) using a new coherent theory for local actions that applies to all actions on trees. This theory is a local action complement to classical Bass-Serre theory. On the one hand, our theory gives a decomposition of a group acting on a tree into a local action diagram, a decorated graph that encodes all local information, and on the other hand a construction of a group acting on a tree from a given local action diagram. One can read directly from the local action diagram whether the resulting group has certain properties, like geometric density, compact generation
What carries the argument
The local action diagram: a decorated graph encoding the local actions of vertex stabilisers on their neighbours, serving as the complete invariant under property (P).
If this is right
- Geometric density of the group is determined by inspecting the local action diagram.
- Compact generation of the group is determined by inspecting the local action diagram.
- Simplicity of the group is determined by inspecting the local action diagram.
- Every closed action with property (P) arises from some local action diagram.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The diagrams provide a uniform way to generate all previously known examples of nondiscrete simple groups built from property (P).
- Converting an existing action to its diagram allows immediate verification of its listed properties without separate arguments.
- The same diagram language may organise actions that preserve additional structure such as a measure or a metric.
Load-bearing premise
A single coherent local-action theory exists that applies uniformly to all closed actions on trees with property (P) and yields both a complete decomposition into diagrams and a faithful reconstruction from any diagram.
What would settle it
An explicit closed group action on a tree with independence property (P) that cannot be expressed as a local action diagram, or a local action diagram whose reconstruction fails to satisfy property (P).
read the original abstract
Local actions (actions of a vertex stabiliser on the neighbours of that vertex) have become an important approach to group actions on trees since J. Tits' introduction in 1970 of the independence property (P) and especially since a 2000 paper by M. Burger and Sh. Mozes. This `local-to-global' approach has been critical in the development of the theory of totally disconnected locally compact groups because it allows the construction of nondiscrete group actions on trees while keeping control over the action of a vertex stabiliser, in a way that is not practical under the classical Bass-Serre approach. The majority of constructions of nonlinear nondiscrete locally compact simple groups use (P) and its generalisations. In this article we give a full classification and description of all closed group actions on trees with Tits' independence property (P) using a new coherent theory for local actions that applies to all actions on trees. This theory is a `local action' complement to classical Bass-Serre theory. On the one hand, our theory gives a decomposition of a group acting on a tree into a `local action diagram' (a decorated graph that encodes all `local' information), and on the other hand a construction of a group acting on a tree from a given local action diagram. One can read directly from the local action diagram whether the resulting group has certain properties, like geometric density, compact generation and simplicity.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper develops a 'local action' theory as a complement to Bass-Serre theory for closed subgroups G ≤ Aut(T) satisfying Tits' independence property (P). It claims a decomposition of any such G into a decorated graph called a local action diagram that encodes all local permutation-group data at vertices, together with a faithful inverse construction that produces a closed group with (P) from any such diagram; properties such as geometric density, compact generation and simplicity are asserted to be readable directly from the diagram.
Significance. If the decomposition and reconstruction are fully faithful and preserve (P) and closedness without extra conditions, the work would supply a uniform, diagram-based classification that strengthens the local-to-global methods introduced by Tits and developed by Burger-Mozes, with direct applications to the construction of nondiscrete simple td lc groups.
major comments (2)
- [reconstruction theorem] The reconstruction theorem (presumably §3 or §4) asserts that an arbitrary local action diagram can be glued to produce a closed subgroup with (P). The manuscript must explicitly verify that the edge-stabilizer compatibility required for (P) at adjacent vertices is automatically satisfied by the diagram data alone; otherwise the inverse construction is not faithful for all inputs and the classification is incomplete.
- [decomposition theorem] The decomposition theorem claims that every closed G with (P) arises from a unique local action diagram. The proof must show that the diagram is independent of the choice of fundamental domain or generating set; if the extraction of local actions at vertices requires additional global closedness arguments that are not functorial, the correspondence fails to be bijective.
minor comments (1)
- Notation for the decorated graph (vertices labelled by local permutation groups, edges by stabilizers) should be introduced with a single running example that is carried through both the decomposition and reconstruction sections.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and the detailed comments on the reconstruction and decomposition theorems. We agree that greater explicitness on certain verifications would improve the manuscript and will incorporate clarifications in a revised version.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [reconstruction theorem] The reconstruction theorem (presumably §3 or §4) asserts that an arbitrary local action diagram can be glued to produce a closed subgroup with (P). The manuscript must explicitly verify that the edge-stabilizer compatibility required for (P) at adjacent vertices is automatically satisfied by the diagram data alone; otherwise the inverse construction is not faithful for all inputs and the classification is incomplete.
Authors: We thank the referee for this observation. The local action diagram is defined so that it includes the full data of the edge stabilizers together with their embeddings into the adjacent vertex actions; the reconstruction theorem then assembles the group by taking the appropriate inverse limit over these data. The proof already verifies that this assembly automatically satisfies the edge-stabilizer compatibility needed for (P), because the diagram encodes precisely the required inclusions and actions. To make the argument more transparent, we will insert a short dedicated paragraph (or lemma) immediately after the statement of the reconstruction theorem that isolates this compatibility check. revision: partial
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Referee: [decomposition theorem] The decomposition theorem claims that every closed G with (P) arises from a unique local action diagram. The proof must show that the diagram is independent of the choice of fundamental domain or generating set; if the extraction of local actions at vertices requires additional global closedness arguments that are not functorial, the correspondence fails to be bijective.
Authors: The decomposition extracts the local action diagram directly from the conjugacy classes of vertex and edge stabilizers together with their natural actions on the link; because the group is closed and satisfies (P), these data are intrinsic and do not depend on a particular fundamental domain or generating set. The uniqueness part of the proof shows that any two diagrams obtained from different choices are canonically isomorphic. We will revise the decomposition section to add an explicit remark confirming independence from the choice of domain and to note the functoriality of the extraction map. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity: new local-action theory is constructed from external Tits/Burger-Mozes foundations
full rationale
The paper introduces a decomposition into local action diagrams and a reconstruction construction as a complement to Bass-Serre theory. It explicitly grounds the independence property (P) in Tits (1970) and Burger-Mozes (2000), with the classification presented as a uniform mathematical framework applicable to all closed actions with (P). No self-definitional loops, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations appear in the abstract or claimed derivation chain. The gluing and faithfulness claims are part of the new theory's content rather than reductions to prior inputs by construction. This is the normal case of an independent development.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Tits' independence property (P) holds for the local actions under consideration
invented entities (1)
-
local action diagram
no independent evidence
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AbsoluteFloorClosure.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Theorem 1.2. There is a natural one-to-one correspondence between conjugacy classes of (P)-closed actions on trees and isomorphism classes of local action diagrams.
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Definition 1.1. A local action diagram Δ = (Γ, (Xa), (G(v))) … G(v) is a closed subgroup of Sym(Xv) …
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
- [1]
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[2]
M. Burger and Sh. Mozes, Groups acting on trees: from loca l to global structure. Publ. Math. IH ´ES 92 (2000), 113–150
work page 2000
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[3]
P.-E. Caprace and P. R. Wesolek, Indicability, residual finiteness, and simple subquotients of groups acting on trees. Geom. Topol. 22 (2018), no. 7, 4163–4204
work page 2018
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[4]
I. Castellano, Rational discrete first degree cohomolog y for totally dis- connected locally compact groups. Math. Proc. Camb. Philos. Soc. 168 (2020), no. 2, 361–377
work page 2020
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[5]
The GAP Group, GAP – Groups, Algorithms, and Programming , Ver- sion 4.8.7 (2017), http://www.gap-system.org
work page 2017
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[6]
Holt, Enumerating subgroups of the symmetric group
D. Holt, Enumerating subgroups of the symmetric group. I n: Compu- tational Group Theory and the Theory of Groups, II , edited by L.-C. Kappe, A. Magidin and R. Morse (2010), AMS Contemporary Math e- matics book series, vol. 511, pp. 33–37
work page 2010
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R. G. M¨ oller, FC ´ -elements in totally disconnected groups and auto- morphisms of infinite graphs. Math. Scand. 92 (2003), 261–268
work page 2003
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[8]
R. G. M¨ oller and J. Vonk, Normal subgroups of groups acti ng on trees and automorphism groups of graphs. J. Group Theory 15 (2012), no. 6, 831–850
work page 2012
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[9]
J. P. Serre, Trees. Springer Monogr. in Math., Springer, Berlin, 2003
work page 2003
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[10]
N.J.A. Sloane, The On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Seq uences, pub- lished electronically at https://oeis.org
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[11]
S. M. Smith, A product for permutation groups and topolo gical groups. Duke Math. J. 166 (2017), no. 15, 2965–2999
work page 2017
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[12]
Tits, Sur le groupe des automorphismes d’un arbre
J. Tits, Sur le groupe des automorphismes d’un arbre. In : Essays on topology and related topics (M´ emoires d´ edi´ es ` a Georges de Rham) , Springer, New York, 1970, pp. 188–211. 56
work page 1970
discussion (0)
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