Homotopy-commutativity in spinor groups (Q5930012): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 11:37, 9 December 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1587251
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English
Homotopy-commutativity in spinor groups
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1587251

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    Homotopy-commutativity in spinor groups (English)
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    7 August 2001
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    Let \(G\) be a topological group and \(S\), \(S'\) subsets of \(G\) which contain the identity. The sets \(S\) and \(S'\) are said to satisfy homotopy-commutativity if the commutator map \(c\colon S\wedge S'\rightarrow G, (x,y)\mapsto xyx^{-1}y^{-1}\) is null homotopic. In this paper the homotopy-commutativity of spinor groups is described. If \(SO(n)\) and \(SO(m)\) homotopy-commute in \(SO(n+m-1)\), then the pair \((n,m)\) is called \(SO\)-irregular and otherwise \(SO\)-regular. Similarly if \(Spin(n)\) and \(Spin(m)\) homotopy-commute in \(Spin(n+m-1)\), then \((n,m)\) is called spin-irregular and otherwise spin-regular. In this paper the following main results are proved: Theorem 1. Let neither \(n-1\) nor \(m-1\) be a power of 2 and \(n+m\neq 4\) or 8. If \(n\) or \(m\) is even or if \(\left(\begin{matrix} n+m+-1\cr n-1 \end{matrix} \right)\equiv 0~mod~2\) then \((n,m)\) is spin-regular. Theorem 2. If \(n=3\) and \(m\equiv 1\bmod 4\) then \((3,m)\) is spin-irregular.
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    spinor groups
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    homotopy-commutativity
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    spin-regularity
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