Hilbert-smith Conjecture

In mathematics, the Hilbert-Smith conjecture is concerned with the transformation groups of manifolds; and in particular with the limitations on topological groups G that can act effectively (faithfully) on a (topological) manifold M. Restricting to G which are locally compact and have a continuous, faithful group action on M, it states that G must be a Lie group. Because of known structural results on G, it is enough to deal with the case where G is the additive group Zp of p-adic integers, for some prime number p. An equivalent form of the conjecture is that Zp has no faithful group action on a topological manifold. A proof of the conjecture was announced in 2002 by Louis McAuley, but it has not been accepted by the mathematical community. The conjecture is still widely considered to be open. The naming of the conjecture is for David Hilbert, and the American topologist Paul A. Smith. It is considered by some to be a better formulation of Hilbert's fifth problem, than the characterisation in the category of topological groups of the Lie groups often cited as a solution.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
latenkwa
m687
robert f. wagner
brad mahugh
joyce cary
particular church
ightham mote
permission culture
edward craggs eliot, 1st baron eliot
ightham
tom mann
die hamletmaschine
anglican use
hildenborough
legal lexicography
mrdalsjkull
unscop
eyjafjallajkull
jia dao
neural correlate of consciousness
the dying swan
bristol grammar school
lsp dictionary
stephen altschul
steve zodiac
dead ball
treaty of stockholm (great northern war)
treaty of stockholm
carly schroeder
northern war
oast house
joshua pusey
cultural christians
berossus
timeline of the bbc
waterfalls of iceland
tall poppy syndrome
norwegian people
brst formalism
yalda
highlands of iceland
faddeev popov ghost
kree
ricardo flores magn