Constructing 6-fold cover of $S^1 vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $cong S_6$ Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Covering spaces Hatcher question 6.Universal Cover of wedge sums of spaces?Universal Cover of the Punctured TorusHow to find universal covering space?Deck transformations of universal cover are isomorphic to the fundamental group - explicitlyCover of the disk that behaves like a circleWhat does this action of $pi_1$ on the universal cover of $X$ induces a deck transformation?Does $S^1 vee S^1$ have a cover homotopically equivalent to the wedge sum of $k$ circles?For the space $X = T # T$ find its fundamental group and prove the universal cover is contractible.Deck transformation group isomorphic to $mathbbZ/mathbb6Z$

Random body shuffle every night—can we still function?

The Nth Gryphon Number

Is CEO the "profession" with the most psychopaths?

How does the math work when buying airline miles?

How to compare two different files line by line in unix?

What would you call this weird metallic apparatus that allows you to lift people?

Most bit efficient text communication method?

Flash light on something

Significance of Cersei's obsession with elephants?

How were pictures turned from film to a big picture in a picture frame before digital scanning?

A letter with no particular backstory

How to write capital alpha?

Is it fair for a professor to grade us on the possession of past papers?

Do wooden building fires get hotter than 600°C?

Sentence with dass with three Verbs (One modal and two connected with zu)

Lagrange four-squares theorem --- deterministic complexity

Do I really need to have a message in a novel to appeal to readers?

How could we fake a moon landing now?

Misunderstanding of Sylow theory

Tannaka duality for semisimple groups

Can the Flaming Sphere spell be rammed into multiple Tiny creatures that are in the same 5-foot square?

Does "shooting for effect" have contradictory meanings in different areas?

How long can equipment go unused before powering up runs the risk of damage?

Why is it faster to reheat something than it is to cook it?



Constructing 6-fold cover of $S^1 vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $cong S_6$



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Covering spaces Hatcher question 6.Universal Cover of wedge sums of spaces?Universal Cover of the Punctured TorusHow to find universal covering space?Deck transformations of universal cover are isomorphic to the fundamental group - explicitlyCover of the disk that behaves like a circleWhat does this action of $pi_1$ on the universal cover of $X$ induces a deck transformation?Does $S^1 vee S^1$ have a cover homotopically equivalent to the wedge sum of $k$ circles?For the space $X = T # T$ find its fundamental group and prove the universal cover is contractible.Deck transformation group isomorphic to $mathbbZ/mathbb6Z$










1












$begingroup$


So i'm thinking that this will be a cover space of maximum possible symmetry. Will a "necklace" of 6 circles work? Any tips appreciated










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
    $endgroup$
    – Jason DeVito
    Mar 26 at 14:27






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 14:56







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:03






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:22






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
    $endgroup$
    – William
    Mar 26 at 15:27















1












$begingroup$


So i'm thinking that this will be a cover space of maximum possible symmetry. Will a "necklace" of 6 circles work? Any tips appreciated










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
    $endgroup$
    – Jason DeVito
    Mar 26 at 14:27






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 14:56







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:03






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:22






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
    $endgroup$
    – William
    Mar 26 at 15:27













1












1








1





$begingroup$


So i'm thinking that this will be a cover space of maximum possible symmetry. Will a "necklace" of 6 circles work? Any tips appreciated










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




So i'm thinking that this will be a cover space of maximum possible symmetry. Will a "necklace" of 6 circles work? Any tips appreciated







algebraic-topology geometric-topology






share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Mar 26 at 14:09









Mathematical MushroomMathematical Mushroom

1778




1778







  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
    $endgroup$
    – Jason DeVito
    Mar 26 at 14:27






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 14:56







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:03






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:22






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
    $endgroup$
    – William
    Mar 26 at 15:27












  • 3




    $begingroup$
    I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
    $endgroup$
    – Jason DeVito
    Mar 26 at 14:27






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 14:56







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:03






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
    $endgroup$
    – Connor Malin
    Mar 26 at 15:22






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
    $endgroup$
    – William
    Mar 26 at 15:27







3




3




$begingroup$
I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
$endgroup$
– Jason DeVito
Mar 26 at 14:27




$begingroup$
I don't know the answer immediately, but I don't think it's a necklace of $6$ circles. I think it's much bigger. The point is that the deck group acts freely, so the inverse image of a point must contain more than $6$ elements. In fact, by the orbit-stabilizer theorem (since the stabilizer must be trivial), the orbit must contain $|S_6| = 6! = 720$ elements. So you are looking for at least a 720-sheeted covering....(or I made a mistake. I usually just think about the deck group associated to the universal covering...)
$endgroup$
– Jason DeVito
Mar 26 at 14:27




2




2




$begingroup$
Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 14:56





$begingroup$
Supposing the cover is connected, it is impossible to have a 6 sheeted cover like that because the number of elements in the preimage is the index of the fundamental group under the induced map (call the image G). You might know that the deck transformations of a covering are isomorphic to the normalizer of G quotient G. This implies that index is at least 720.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 14:56





1




1




$begingroup$
Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 15:03




$begingroup$
Probably a better explanation (but in the same vein) is that a deck transformation is determined by where it sends a single point, so an n sheeted cover has at most n deck transformations.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 15:03




1




1




$begingroup$
It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 15:22




$begingroup$
It is a consequence of the lifting properties for covers. I think Hatcher proves it.
$endgroup$
– Connor Malin
Mar 26 at 15:22




3




3




$begingroup$
Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
$endgroup$
– William
Mar 26 at 15:27




$begingroup$
Your question doesn't mention anything about connectivity. If your cover is not required to be connected then you can take $6$ copies of $S^1 vee S^1$ and the deck transformation group just permutes the copies.
$endgroup$
– William
Mar 26 at 15:27










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0












$begingroup$

The comments are correct that this construction is impossible, however the reason is flawed.



First of all, the action of the deck transformation group $G$ of a connected covering map $f : X to Y$ a free action, meaning that the action of a nontrivial element of $G$ has no fixed points --- so no, a deck transformation cannot take $y_2$ to $y_3$ whilst fixing $y_1$.



Second, given $x in X$ and $y=f(x) in Y$, the action of $G$ on the subset $f^-1(y) subset X$ need not be transitive. In fact, that action is transitive if and only if the covering map $f : X to Y$ is regular, if and only if the image of the induced homomorphism $pi_1(X,x) to pi_1(Y,f(x))$ is a normal subgroup of $pi_1(Y,f(x))$. However, this only makes the construction more impossible (if that means anything), because it implies that the cardinality of $f^-1(x)$ is greater than or equal to the order of the group $G$.



So, in a covering map of degree $6$, the set $f^-1(x)$ has cardinality $6$, and there is no free action of a group of order $6! = 120$ on a set of cardinality $6$.



For proofs of the various things discussed in this answer, I suggest sitting down with a good solid course on the relationship between fundamental groups and covering spaces, as in Hatcher.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$




















    0












    $begingroup$

    There is a $6!$-fold connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $S_6$. Recall that $S_6$ has a presentation with two generators, hence there is a normal subgroup $Nsubset F_2$ of the free group on two generators. Let's identify $F_2=pi_1(S^1vee S^1)$. Hence, there is a homomorphism $f:pi_1(S^1vee S^1)to S_6$ through the quotient map $F_2to F_2/N$.



    By standard facts about covering spaces (as seen in Hatcher) there is then a connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ associated to the normal subgroup $N$ for which $S_6$ is the group of deck transformations.



    You might know this covering space as the Cayley graph of $S_6$ with the chosen generating set. In fact, the two-generator Cayley graphs of $S_6$ encompass the set of all connected normal covers of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group isomorphic to $S_6$.



    (William in the comments points out that there is a $6$-fold disconnected cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with $S_6$ as its group of deck transformations: the disjoint union $coprod_i=1^6S^1vee S^1$.)






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













      Your Answer








      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "69"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader:
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      ,
      noCode: true, onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );













      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3163226%2fconstructing-6-fold-cover-of-s1-vee-s1-with-deck-transformation-group-con%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      0












      $begingroup$

      The comments are correct that this construction is impossible, however the reason is flawed.



      First of all, the action of the deck transformation group $G$ of a connected covering map $f : X to Y$ a free action, meaning that the action of a nontrivial element of $G$ has no fixed points --- so no, a deck transformation cannot take $y_2$ to $y_3$ whilst fixing $y_1$.



      Second, given $x in X$ and $y=f(x) in Y$, the action of $G$ on the subset $f^-1(y) subset X$ need not be transitive. In fact, that action is transitive if and only if the covering map $f : X to Y$ is regular, if and only if the image of the induced homomorphism $pi_1(X,x) to pi_1(Y,f(x))$ is a normal subgroup of $pi_1(Y,f(x))$. However, this only makes the construction more impossible (if that means anything), because it implies that the cardinality of $f^-1(x)$ is greater than or equal to the order of the group $G$.



      So, in a covering map of degree $6$, the set $f^-1(x)$ has cardinality $6$, and there is no free action of a group of order $6! = 120$ on a set of cardinality $6$.



      For proofs of the various things discussed in this answer, I suggest sitting down with a good solid course on the relationship between fundamental groups and covering spaces, as in Hatcher.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$

















        0












        $begingroup$

        The comments are correct that this construction is impossible, however the reason is flawed.



        First of all, the action of the deck transformation group $G$ of a connected covering map $f : X to Y$ a free action, meaning that the action of a nontrivial element of $G$ has no fixed points --- so no, a deck transformation cannot take $y_2$ to $y_3$ whilst fixing $y_1$.



        Second, given $x in X$ and $y=f(x) in Y$, the action of $G$ on the subset $f^-1(y) subset X$ need not be transitive. In fact, that action is transitive if and only if the covering map $f : X to Y$ is regular, if and only if the image of the induced homomorphism $pi_1(X,x) to pi_1(Y,f(x))$ is a normal subgroup of $pi_1(Y,f(x))$. However, this only makes the construction more impossible (if that means anything), because it implies that the cardinality of $f^-1(x)$ is greater than or equal to the order of the group $G$.



        So, in a covering map of degree $6$, the set $f^-1(x)$ has cardinality $6$, and there is no free action of a group of order $6! = 120$ on a set of cardinality $6$.



        For proofs of the various things discussed in this answer, I suggest sitting down with a good solid course on the relationship between fundamental groups and covering spaces, as in Hatcher.






        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$















          0












          0








          0





          $begingroup$

          The comments are correct that this construction is impossible, however the reason is flawed.



          First of all, the action of the deck transformation group $G$ of a connected covering map $f : X to Y$ a free action, meaning that the action of a nontrivial element of $G$ has no fixed points --- so no, a deck transformation cannot take $y_2$ to $y_3$ whilst fixing $y_1$.



          Second, given $x in X$ and $y=f(x) in Y$, the action of $G$ on the subset $f^-1(y) subset X$ need not be transitive. In fact, that action is transitive if and only if the covering map $f : X to Y$ is regular, if and only if the image of the induced homomorphism $pi_1(X,x) to pi_1(Y,f(x))$ is a normal subgroup of $pi_1(Y,f(x))$. However, this only makes the construction more impossible (if that means anything), because it implies that the cardinality of $f^-1(x)$ is greater than or equal to the order of the group $G$.



          So, in a covering map of degree $6$, the set $f^-1(x)$ has cardinality $6$, and there is no free action of a group of order $6! = 120$ on a set of cardinality $6$.



          For proofs of the various things discussed in this answer, I suggest sitting down with a good solid course on the relationship between fundamental groups and covering spaces, as in Hatcher.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          The comments are correct that this construction is impossible, however the reason is flawed.



          First of all, the action of the deck transformation group $G$ of a connected covering map $f : X to Y$ a free action, meaning that the action of a nontrivial element of $G$ has no fixed points --- so no, a deck transformation cannot take $y_2$ to $y_3$ whilst fixing $y_1$.



          Second, given $x in X$ and $y=f(x) in Y$, the action of $G$ on the subset $f^-1(y) subset X$ need not be transitive. In fact, that action is transitive if and only if the covering map $f : X to Y$ is regular, if and only if the image of the induced homomorphism $pi_1(X,x) to pi_1(Y,f(x))$ is a normal subgroup of $pi_1(Y,f(x))$. However, this only makes the construction more impossible (if that means anything), because it implies that the cardinality of $f^-1(x)$ is greater than or equal to the order of the group $G$.



          So, in a covering map of degree $6$, the set $f^-1(x)$ has cardinality $6$, and there is no free action of a group of order $6! = 120$ on a set of cardinality $6$.



          For proofs of the various things discussed in this answer, I suggest sitting down with a good solid course on the relationship between fundamental groups and covering spaces, as in Hatcher.







          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered Apr 2 at 0:11









          Lee MosherLee Mosher

          52.5k33891




          52.5k33891





















              0












              $begingroup$

              There is a $6!$-fold connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $S_6$. Recall that $S_6$ has a presentation with two generators, hence there is a normal subgroup $Nsubset F_2$ of the free group on two generators. Let's identify $F_2=pi_1(S^1vee S^1)$. Hence, there is a homomorphism $f:pi_1(S^1vee S^1)to S_6$ through the quotient map $F_2to F_2/N$.



              By standard facts about covering spaces (as seen in Hatcher) there is then a connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ associated to the normal subgroup $N$ for which $S_6$ is the group of deck transformations.



              You might know this covering space as the Cayley graph of $S_6$ with the chosen generating set. In fact, the two-generator Cayley graphs of $S_6$ encompass the set of all connected normal covers of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group isomorphic to $S_6$.



              (William in the comments points out that there is a $6$-fold disconnected cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with $S_6$ as its group of deck transformations: the disjoint union $coprod_i=1^6S^1vee S^1$.)






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$

















                0












                $begingroup$

                There is a $6!$-fold connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $S_6$. Recall that $S_6$ has a presentation with two generators, hence there is a normal subgroup $Nsubset F_2$ of the free group on two generators. Let's identify $F_2=pi_1(S^1vee S^1)$. Hence, there is a homomorphism $f:pi_1(S^1vee S^1)to S_6$ through the quotient map $F_2to F_2/N$.



                By standard facts about covering spaces (as seen in Hatcher) there is then a connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ associated to the normal subgroup $N$ for which $S_6$ is the group of deck transformations.



                You might know this covering space as the Cayley graph of $S_6$ with the chosen generating set. In fact, the two-generator Cayley graphs of $S_6$ encompass the set of all connected normal covers of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group isomorphic to $S_6$.



                (William in the comments points out that there is a $6$-fold disconnected cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with $S_6$ as its group of deck transformations: the disjoint union $coprod_i=1^6S^1vee S^1$.)






                share|cite|improve this answer









                $endgroup$















                  0












                  0








                  0





                  $begingroup$

                  There is a $6!$-fold connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $S_6$. Recall that $S_6$ has a presentation with two generators, hence there is a normal subgroup $Nsubset F_2$ of the free group on two generators. Let's identify $F_2=pi_1(S^1vee S^1)$. Hence, there is a homomorphism $f:pi_1(S^1vee S^1)to S_6$ through the quotient map $F_2to F_2/N$.



                  By standard facts about covering spaces (as seen in Hatcher) there is then a connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ associated to the normal subgroup $N$ for which $S_6$ is the group of deck transformations.



                  You might know this covering space as the Cayley graph of $S_6$ with the chosen generating set. In fact, the two-generator Cayley graphs of $S_6$ encompass the set of all connected normal covers of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group isomorphic to $S_6$.



                  (William in the comments points out that there is a $6$-fold disconnected cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with $S_6$ as its group of deck transformations: the disjoint union $coprod_i=1^6S^1vee S^1$.)






                  share|cite|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  There is a $6!$-fold connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group $S_6$. Recall that $S_6$ has a presentation with two generators, hence there is a normal subgroup $Nsubset F_2$ of the free group on two generators. Let's identify $F_2=pi_1(S^1vee S^1)$. Hence, there is a homomorphism $f:pi_1(S^1vee S^1)to S_6$ through the quotient map $F_2to F_2/N$.



                  By standard facts about covering spaces (as seen in Hatcher) there is then a connected normal cover of $S^1vee S^1$ associated to the normal subgroup $N$ for which $S_6$ is the group of deck transformations.



                  You might know this covering space as the Cayley graph of $S_6$ with the chosen generating set. In fact, the two-generator Cayley graphs of $S_6$ encompass the set of all connected normal covers of $S^1vee S^1$ with deck transformation group isomorphic to $S_6$.



                  (William in the comments points out that there is a $6$-fold disconnected cover of $S^1vee S^1$ with $S_6$ as its group of deck transformations: the disjoint union $coprod_i=1^6S^1vee S^1$.)







                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  answered Apr 2 at 1:50









                  Kyle MillerKyle Miller

                  10.1k930




                  10.1k930



























                      draft saved

                      draft discarded
















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid


                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                      Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3163226%2fconstructing-6-fold-cover-of-s1-vee-s1-with-deck-transformation-group-con%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Triangular numbers and gcdProving sum of a set is $0 pmod n$ if $n$ is odd, or $fracn2 pmod n$ if $n$ is even?Is greatest common divisor of two numbers really their smallest linear combination?GCD, LCM RelationshipProve a set of nonnegative integers with greatest common divisor 1 and closed under addition has all but finite many nonnegative integers.all pairs of a and b in an equation containing gcdTriangular Numbers Modulo $k$ - Hit All Values?Understanding the Existence and Uniqueness of the GCDGCD and LCM with logical symbolsThe greatest common divisor of two positive integers less than 100 is equal to 3. Their least common multiple is twelve times one of the integers.Suppose that for all integers $x$, $x|a$ and $x|b$ if and only if $x|c$. Then $c = gcd(a,b)$Which is the gcd of 2 numbers which are multiplied and the result is 600000?

                      Србија Садржај Етимологија Географија Историја Политички систем и уставно-правно уређење Становништво Привреда Образовање Култура Спорт Државни празници Галерија Напомене Референце Литература Спољашње везе Мени за навигацију44°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.46744°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800° СГШ; 20.467° ИГД / 44.800; 20.467ууРезултати пописа 2011. према старости и полуу„Положај, рељеф и клима”„Europe: Serbia”„Основни подаци”„Gross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) valuation of country GDP”„Human Development Report 2018 – "Human Development Indices and Indicators 6”„Устав Републике Србије”Правопис српскога језикаGoogle DriveComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human Health„UNSD — Methodology”„Процене становништва | Републички завод за статистику Србије”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the Depression„The Serbian Revolution and the Serbian State”„Устав Србије”„Serbia a few steps away from concluding WTO accession negotiations”„A credible enlargement perspective for and enhanced EU engagement with the Western Balkans”„Freedom in the World 2017”„Serbia: On the Way to EU Accession”„Human Development Indices and Indicators: 2018 Statistical Update”„2018 Social Progress Index”„Global Peace Index”Sabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and Foes„Пројекат Растко—Лузица”„Serbia: Introduction”„Serbia”оригинала„The World Factbook: Serbia”„The World Factbook: Kosovo”„Border Police Department”„Uredba o kontroli prelaska administrativne linije prema Autonomnoj pokrajini Kosovo i Metohija”оригиналаIvana Carevic, Velimir Jovanovic, STRATIGRAPHIC-STRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MAČVA BASIN, UDC 911.2:551.7(497.11), pp. 1Archived„About the Carpathians – Carpathian Heritage Society”оригинала„O Srbiji”оригинала„Статистички годишњак Србије, 2009: Географски прегледГеографија за осми разред основне школе„Отворена, електронска база едукационих радова”„Влада Републике Србије: Положај, рељеф и клима”„Копрен (Стара планина)”„Туристичка дестинација-Србија”„Висина водопада”„РХМЗ — Републички Хидрометеоролошки завод Србије Кнеза Вишеслава 66 Београд”„Фауна Србије”„Српске шуме на издисају”„Lepih šest odsto Srbije”„Илустрована историја Срба — Увод”„Винчанска култура - Градска општина Гроцка”„''„Винча — Праисторијска метропола”''”оригиналаЈужни Словени под византијском влашћу (600—1025)Држава маћедонских Словена„Карађорђе истина и мит, Проф. др Радош Љушић, Вечерње новости, фељтон, 18 наставака, 24. август - 10. септембар 2003.”„Политика: Како је утврђена војна неутралност, 13. јануар. 2010, приступљено децембра 2012.”„Србија и РС оживеле Дејтонски споразум”„Са српским пасошем у 104 земље”Војска Србије | О Војсци | Војска Србије — Улога, намена и задациАрхивираноВојска Србије | ОрганизацијаАрхивираноОдлука о изради Стратегије просторног развоја Републике Србије до 2020. годинеЗакон о територијалној организацији Републике СрбијеЗакон о државној управиНајчешће постављана питања.„Смањење броја статистичких региона кроз измене Закона о регионалном развоју”„2011 Human development Report”„Službena upotreba jezika i pisama”„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији. Књига 4: Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална припадност”„Вероисповест, матерњи језик и национална”„Специјална известитељка УН за слободу религије и вероисповести Асма Јахангир, код Заштитника грађана Саше Јанковића”„Закон о државним и другим празницима у Републици Србији”„Веронаука у српским школама”„Serbia – Ancestral Genography Atlas”Бела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаGross domestic product based on purchasing-power-parity (PPP) per capita GDP БДП 2007—2013Актуелни показатељи — Република Србија„Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. године у Републици Србији Књига 7: Економска активност”Zemlje kandidati za članstvo u EU„Putin drops South Stream gas pipeline to EU, courts Turkey”„„Соко — историјат””оригинала„„Рембас — историјат””оригинала„„Лубница — историјат””оригинала„„Штаваљ — Историјат””оригинала„„Боговина — историјат””оригинала„„Јасеновац — историјат””оригинала„„Вршка чука — историјат””оригинала„„Ибарски рудници — историјат””оригинала„Закон о просторном плану Републике Србије од 2010 до 2020”„Кривични законик — Недозвољена изградња нуклеарних постројења, члан 267”„Б92: Srbija uklonila obogaćeni uranijum, 25. октобар 2011”„Коришћење енергије ветра у Србији — природни услови и практична примена”„Енергија ветра”„Србија може да прави струју од сунца, биомасе, воде и ветра”„Моја електрана и друге ветрењаче”„Биомаса, струја без инвестиција”„Auto-karte Srbije”„www.srbija.gov.rs Статистике о Србији”оригинала„Статистика зе месец децембар и 2016. годину”„Turizam u Srbiji”„Univerzitet u Beogradu: Vek i po akademskog znanja”„Vojnomedicinska akademija: 165 godina tradicije i napretka”Никола Гиљен, Соња Јовићевић Јов и Јелена Мандић: Мирослављево јеванђеље; Текст је публикован у ревији „Историја” и настао је као део научно-истраживачког рада Фонда „Принцеза Оливера”„World music асоцијација Србије”оригинала„World music у Србији”оригинала„Pogledajte: Boban Marković svira u redakciji „Blica”!”„Eurovision Song Contest 2007 Final”„Projekat Rastko, Alojz Ujes: Joakim Vujic”„Унеско”„Списак локалитета Светске баштине”„Guča i Egzit zaludeli svet”оригинала„Sabor trubača GUČA”„Interesting facts about Exit”оригинала„FIFA Association Information”„Serbia women win EuroBasket title, gain first Olympics berth”„Odbojkašice ispisale istoriju – Srbija je svetski prvak!”„Сајт Ватерполо савеза Србије, Освојене медаље”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Бари”„Сајт ФК Црвена звезда, Токио”„Blic:Zlatna Milica! Mandićeva donela Srbiji najsjajnije odličje u Londonu!”„Милица Мандић освојила златну медаљу („Политика”, 12. август 2012)”„Златни Давор Штефанек”„DŽUDO ŠAMPIONAT Majdov osvojio svetsko zlato”„Španovićeva trećim skokom svih vremena do zlata!”„Чудо Иване Шпановић — 7,24 м („Политика”, 5. март 2017)”The Age of Nepotism: Travel Journals and Observations from the Balkans During the DepressionCalcium and Magnesium in Groundwater: Occurrence and Significance for Human HealthComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesБела књига Милошевићеве владавинеоригиналаComparative Hungarian Cultural StudiesSabres of Two Easts: An Untold History of Muslims in Eastern Europe, Their Friends and FoesГеографија за осми разред основне школеSerbia: the country, people, life, customsМедијиВодичПодациВлада Републике СрбијеНародна скупштина Републике СрбијеНародна канцеларија председника Републике СрбијеНародна банка СрбијеТуристичка организација СрбијеПортал еУправе Републике СрбијеРепубличко јавно правобранилаштвоууууууWorldCat151202876n851959190000 0000 9526 67094054598-24101000570825ge130919

                      Barbados Ynhâld Skiednis | Geografy | Demografy | Navigaasjemenu