In geometric group theory, a presentation complex is a 2-dimensional cell complex associated to any presentation of a group G. The complex has a single vertex, and one loop at the vertex for each generator of G. There is one 2-cell for each relation in the presentation, with the boundary of the 2-cell attached along the appropriate word.
Let [math]\displaystyle{ G= \Z^2 }[/math] be the two-dimensional integer lattice, with presentation
Then the presentation complex for G is a torus, obtained by gluing the opposite sides of a square, the 2-cell, which are labelled x and y. All four corners of the square are glued into a single vertex, the 0-cell of the presentation complex, while a pair consisting of a longtitudal and meridian circles on the torus, intersecting at the vertex, constitutes its 1-skeleton.
The associated Cayley complex is a regular tiling of the plane by unit squares. The 1-skeleton of this complex is a Cayley graph for [math]\displaystyle{ \Z^2 }[/math].
Let [math]\displaystyle{ G = \Z_2 *\Z_2 }[/math] be the Infinite dihedral group, with presentation [math]\displaystyle{ \langle a,b \mid a^2,b^2 \rangle }[/math]. The presentation complex for [math]\displaystyle{ G }[/math] is [math]\displaystyle{ \mathbb{RP}^2 \vee \mathbb{RP}^2 }[/math], the wedge sum of projective planes. For each path, there is one 2-cell glued to each loop, which provides the standard cell structure for each projective plane. The Cayley complex is an infinite string of spheres.[1]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presentation complex.
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