In a meeting in Durham in 1997, Evans asked if an uncountable free group can be realized as the group of automorphisms of a countable structure. This was settled in the negative by Shelah [
1]. Independently, in the context of descriptive set theory, Becher and Kechris [
2] asked if an uncountable Polish group can be free. This was also answered negatively by Shelah [
3], generalizing the techniques of [
1]. Inspired by the question of Becher and Kechris, Solecki [
4] proved that no uncountable Polish group can be free abelian. In this paper, we give a general framework for these results, proving that no uncountable Polish group can be a right-angled Artin group (see Definition 1). We actually prove more:
Theorem 1. Let be an uncountable Polish group and A a group admitting a system of generators whose associated length function satisfies the following conditions:
- (i)
if , then ;
- (ii)
if and , then .
Then G is not isomorphic to A; in fact, there exists a subgroup of G of size (the bounding number) such that is not embeddable in A.
After the authors proved Theorem 1, they discovered that the impossibility to endow groups
A as in Theorem 1 with a Polish group topology follows from an old important result of Dudley [
5]. In fact, Dudley’s work implies more strongly that we cannot even find a homomorphism from a Polish group
G into
A. Apart from the fact that the claim about
in Theorem 1 is of independent interest and not subsumed by Dudley’s work, our focus here is on techniques; i.e., the crucial use of the Compactness Lemma of [
3]. This powerful result has a broad scope of applications, and is used by the authors in a work in preparation [
6] to deal with classes of groups not covered by Theorem 1 or Dudley’s work, most notably the class of right-angled Coxeter groups (see Definition 1).
Proof of Theorem 1. Let
be such that
, for every
, and
such that
and
, for every
. Let
be a set of power
of increasing functions
which is unbounded with respect to the partial order of eventual domination. For transparency, we also assume that for every
we have
. For
, define the following set of equations:
By (3.1, [
3]), for every
,
is solvable in
G. Let
witness it; i.e.,
Let
be the subgroup of
G generated by
. Towards contradiction, suppose that
is an embedding of
into
A, and let
S be a system of generators for
A whose associated length function
satisfies conditions (i) and (ii) of the statement of the theorem. For
and
, let:
Now, is a function from to and so there exists unbounded such that for every the value is a constant . Fix such a and , and let increasing satisfying the following:
- (1)
;
- (2)
.
Claim 1. For every , .
Proof. By induction on
. The case
is clear by the choice of
and
. Let
. Because of assumption (i) on
A, the choice of
, and the choice of
and
, we have:
☐
Now, by the choice of
, we can find
and
such that
. Notice then that by the claim above and the choice of
and
, we have:
Thus, by (1) and the fact that
, using assumption (ii), we infer that
. Hence,
Furthermore, if
, then again by assumption (ii), we have that
, and so
, which contradicts the choice of
. Hence,
, contradicting (
2). It follows that the embedding
from
into
A cannot exist. ☐
Definition 1. Given a graph , the right-angled Artin group
is the group with presentation: If in the presentation , we ask in addition that all the generators are involutions, then we speak of right-angled Coxeter groups .
Thus, for , a graph with no edges (resp. a complete graph) is a free group (resp. a free abelian group).
Definition 2. Let be a right-angled Artin group and its associated length function. We say that an element is cyclically reduced if it cannot be written as with .
Fact 1. Let be a right-angled Artin group, its associated length function, and . Then:
- (1)
g can be written as with f cyclically reduced and ;
- (2)
if and f is cyclically reduced, then ;
- (3)
if and is as in (1), then .
Proof. Item (1) is proved in (Proposition on p. 38, [
7]). The rest is folklore. ☐
Corollary 1. No uncountable Polish group can be a right-angled Artin group.
Proof. By Theorem 1 it suffices to show that for every right-angled Artin group the associated length function satisfies conditions (i) and (ii) of the theorem, but by Fact 1, this is clear. ☐
As is well known, the automorphism group of a countable structure is naturally endowed with a Polish topology which respects the group structure, hence:
Corollary 2. The automorphism group of a countable structure cannot be an uncountable right-angled Artin group.
As already mentioned, the situation is different for right-angled Coxeter groups; in fact, the structure M with many disjoint unary predicates of size 2 is such that ; i.e., is the right-angled Coxeter group on (a complete graph on continuum many vertices). Notice that in this group for any , we have:
- (i)
;
- (ii)
, and .