Linear representations of binate groups (Q1330681)

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Linear representations of binate groups
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    Linear representations of binate groups (English)
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    30 May 1995
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    A binate group \(G\) is a group with the property that for each finitely generated, proper subgroup \(H < G\), there is a homomorphism \(\varphi : H \to G\), and an element \(t \in G \setminus H\) such that for all \(h \in H\), one has \(h = [t,\varphi(h)]\). Such a group is perfect and acyclic (i.e. has vanishing integral homology in all positive dimensions). It is first shown using homological arguments that binate groups have no non-trivial finite-dimensional unitary representations, and then, independently, using results about algebraic groups, that in fact they have no non-trivial finite-dimensional linear representations whatsoever.
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    finitely generated subgroups
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    binate groups
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    perfect groups
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    acyclic groups
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    integral homology
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    unitary representations
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    linear representations
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