Search results for "Coxeter element"
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IRREDUCIBLE COXETER GROUPS
2004
We prove that a non-spherical irreducible Coxeter group is (directly) indecomposable and that an indefinite irreducible Coxeter group is strongly indecomposable in the sense that all its finite index subgroups are (directly) indecomposable. Let W be a Coxeter group. Write W = WX1 × ⋯ × WXb × WZ3, where WX1, … , WXb are non-spherical irreducible Coxeter groups and WZ3 is a finite one. By a classical result, known as the Krull–Remak–Schmidt theorem, the group WZ3 has a decomposition WZ3 = H1 × ⋯ × Hq as a direct product of indecomposable groups, which is unique up to a central automorphism and a permutation of the factors. Now, W = WX1 × ⋯ × WXb × H1 × ⋯ × Hq is a decomposition of W as a dir…
Commensurability classification of a family of right-angled Coxeter groups
2008
We classify the members of an infinite family of right-angled Coxeter groups up to abstract commensurability.
Coxeter on People and Polytopes
2004
H. S. M. Coxeter, known to his friends as Donald, was not only a remarkable mathematician. He also enriched our historical understanding of how classical geometry helped inspire what has sometimes been called the nineteenth-century’s non-Euclidean revolution (Fig. 35.1). Coxeter was no revolutionary, and the non-Euclidean revolution was already part of history by the time he arrived on the scene. What he did experience was the dramatic aftershock in physics. Countless popular and semi-popular books were written during the early 1920s expounding the new theory of space and time propounded in Einstein’s general theory of relativity. General relativity and subsequent efforts to unite gravitati…