Jump to content

Francisco Javier González-Acuña

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Francisco Javier González-Acuña (nickname "Fico") is a mathematician in the UNAM's institute of mathematics and CIMAT, specializing in low-dimensional topology.

Education

[edit]

He did his graduate studies at Princeton University, obtaining his Ph.D. in 1970. His thesis, written under the supervision of Ralph Fox, was titled On homology spheres.

Research

[edit]

An early result of González-Acuña is that a group G is the homomorphic image of some knot group if and only if G is finitely generated and has weight at most one. This result (a "remarkable theorem", as Lee Neuwirth called it in his review), was published in 1975 in Annals of Mathematics.[1] In 1978, together with José María Montesinos, he answered a question posed by Fox, proving the existence of 2-knots whose groups have infinitely many ends.[2]

With Hamish Short, González-Acuña proposed and worked on the cabling conjecture: the only knots in the 3-sphere which admit a reducible Dehn surgery, i.e. a surgery which results in a reducible 3-manifold, are the cable knots.[3]

See also

[edit]

Selected publications

[edit]
  • González-Acuña, F. (1975). "Homomorphs of knot groups". Annals of Mathematics. Second series. 102 (2): 37–377. doi:10.2307/1971036. JSTOR 1971036. MR 0379671.
  • González-Acuña, F.; Montesinos, José María (1978). "Ends of knot groups". Annals of Mathematics. Second series. 108 (1): 91–96. doi:10.2307/1970930. JSTOR 1970930. MR 0559794.
  • González-Acuña, Francisco González; Short, Hamish (1986). "Knot surgery and primeness". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 99 (1): 89–102. doi:10.1017/S0305004100063969. MR 0809502.
  • Gómez-Larrañaga, J. C.; González-Acuña, F.; Hoste, Jim (1991). "Minimal atlases on 3-manifolds". Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 109: 105–115. doi:10.1017/S0305004100069590. MR 1075124.

References

[edit]
[edit]