Undecidability and the developability of permutoids and rigid pseudogroups
classification
🧮 math.GR
math.COmath.LO
keywords
finiteproblemcamerongroupspartialpermutoidprovepseudogroups
read the original abstract
A permutoid is a set of partial permutations that contains the identity and is such that partial compositions, when defined, have at most one extension in the set. In 2004 Peter Cameron conjectured that there can exist no algorithm that determines whether or not a finite permutoid based on a finite set can be completed to a finite permutation group, and he related this problem to the study of groups that have no non-trivial finite quotients. This note explains how our recent work on the profinite triviality problem for finitely presented groups can be used to prove Cameron's conjecture. We also prove that the existence problem for finite developments of rigid pseudogroups is unsolvable.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.