Talk

Amalgamating groups via linear programming

Abstract

A compact group A is called an amalgamation basis if, for every way of embedding A into compact groups B and C, there exist a compact group D and embeddings BD and CD that agree on the image of A. Bergman in a 1987 paper studied the question of which groups can be amalgamation bases. A fundamental question that is still open is whether the circle group S1 is an amalgamation basis in the category of compact Lie groups. Further reduction shows that it suffices to take B and C to be the special unitary groups. In our work, we focus on the case when B and C are the special unitary group in dimension three. We reformulate the amalgamation question into an algebraic question of constructing specific Schur-positive symmetric polynomials and use integer linear programming to compute the amalgamation. We conjecture that S1 is an amalgamation basis based on our data. This is joint work with Michael Joswig, Mario Kummer, and Andreas Thom.