Reconstructing maps out of groups
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 01:38 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A homeomorphism of a manifold can be recovered from the marked isomorphism class of any finitely generated group of homeomorphisms containing it.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We show that, in many situations, a homeomorphism f of a manifold M may be recovered from the (marked) isomorphism class of a finitely generated group of homeomorphisms containing f. As an application, we relate the notions of critical regularity and of differentiable rigidity, give examples of groups of diffeomorphisms of 1-manifolds with strong differential rigidity, and in so doing give an independent, short proof of a recent result of Kim and Koberda that there exist finitely generated groups of C^α diffeomorphisms of a 1-manifold M, not embeddable into Diff^β(M) for any β > α > 1.
What carries the argument
The marked isomorphism class of a finitely generated group of homeomorphisms containing the target map f.
If this is right
- Critical regularity of an action is tied directly to its differentiable rigidity properties.
- Groups of diffeomorphisms of 1-manifolds exist that exhibit strong differential rigidity.
- Finitely generated groups of C^α diffeomorphisms on a 1-manifold exist that do not embed into Diff^β for any β > α > 1.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The reconstruction supplies a group-theoretic test for whether two actions on the same manifold are the same up to the choice of generators.
- The method may allow detection of rigidity phenomena without constructing explicit conjugacies between actions.
Load-bearing premise
Recovery is possible only under additional hypotheses on the manifold, the group, and the action that hold in many but not necessarily all cases.
What would settle it
Two distinct homeomorphisms f and g on the same manifold M that generate marked-isomorphic finitely generated groups but cannot be distinguished from the group data alone would falsify the reconstruction claim.
read the original abstract
We show that, in many situations, a homeomorphism $f$ of a manifold $M$ may be recovered from the (marked) isomorphism class of a finitely generated group of homeomorphisms containing $f$. As an application, we relate the notions of {\em critical regularity} and of {\em differentiable rigidity}, give examples of groups of diffeomorphisms of 1-manifolds with strong differential rigidity, and in so doing give an independent, short proof of a recent result of Kim and Koberda that there exist finitely generated groups of $C^\alpha$ diffeomorphisms of a 1-manifold $M$, not embeddable into $\mathrm{Diff}^\beta(M)$ for any $\beta > \alpha > 1$.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proves that, in many situations, a homeomorphism f of a manifold M can be recovered from the marked isomorphism class of a finitely generated group of homeomorphisms containing f. It applies this reconstruction to relate critical regularity and differentiable rigidity, constructs examples of groups of diffeomorphisms of 1-manifolds with strong differential rigidity, and gives an independent short proof of Kim and Koberda's result that there exist finitely generated groups of C^α diffeomorphisms of a 1-manifold not embeddable into Diff^β(M) for β > α > 1.
Significance. If the reconstruction theorem holds under explicitly stated hypotheses, the work supplies a group-theoretic tool for recovering individual maps and yields a concise alternative proof of the Kim-Koberda non-embeddability theorem. The examples of differentially rigid groups would strengthen the link between critical regularity and rigidity phenomena in one-dimensional dynamics.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract, §1] Abstract and §1: the central claim is stated only for 'many situations' whose precise hypotheses on M, the group G, and the action (e.g., support conditions, fixed-point behavior, or generation requirements) are not listed; these hypotheses are load-bearing for both the theorem and the Kim-Koberda application in §4, which inherits the same scope limitation.
- [§4] §4, application to Kim-Koberda: the constructed groups must be shown to satisfy the (unstated) hypotheses of the main reconstruction theorem; without this verification the independent proof does not follow from the reconstruction result.
minor comments (1)
- [§2] Notation for the marked isomorphism class should be introduced once and used consistently throughout.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and constructive comments on the manuscript. We agree that the hypotheses of the main reconstruction result require clearer exposition in the abstract and introduction, and that the application in §4 needs explicit verification that the constructed groups satisfy those hypotheses. We will revise the manuscript to address both points.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract, §1] Abstract and §1: the central claim is stated only for 'many situations' whose precise hypotheses on M, the group G, and the action (e.g., support conditions, fixed-point behavior, or generation requirements) are not listed; these hypotheses are load-bearing for both the theorem and the Kim-Koberda application in §4, which inherits the same scope limitation.
Authors: We agree that the phrasing 'in many situations' in the abstract and §1 is imprecise and does not immediately list the hypotheses. The precise hypotheses (including support conditions, fixed-point behavior, and generation requirements) are stated in the main reconstruction theorem (Theorem 1.1). In the revision we will update the abstract and §1 to explicitly summarize these hypotheses, making the scope of the result and its applicability to the Kim-Koberda theorem transparent from the outset. revision: yes
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Referee: [§4] §4, application to Kim-Koberda: the constructed groups must be shown to satisfy the (unstated) hypotheses of the main reconstruction theorem; without this verification the independent proof does not follow from the reconstruction result.
Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript does not explicitly verify that the groups constructed in §4 satisfy the hypotheses of the reconstruction theorem. In the revised version we will insert a short lemma or paragraph in §4 confirming that these groups meet the required conditions on supports, fixed points, and generation, thereby ensuring the independent proof of the Kim-Koberda non-embeddability result follows directly from the reconstruction theorem. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; direct theorem with external application
full rationale
The paper states a reconstruction theorem for homeomorphisms from marked isomorphism classes of finitely generated groups in many situations, then applies it to relate critical regularity and differentiable rigidity while giving an independent short proof of the Kim-Koberda non-embeddability result. No equations or steps reduce by construction to inputs, no parameters are fitted then renamed as predictions, and no load-bearing self-citations or uniqueness theorems imported from the authors' prior work are present. The derivation chain is a standard mathematical proof whose central claim does not collapse to a renaming, ansatz, or self-referential definition.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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