Abstract

Combinatorial group theory has roots in Poincaré's work on the topology of manifolds, which in turn was based on problems in differential equations and analytic number theory. Thus the Fuchsian groups, which are the fundamental (first homotopy) groups of oriented negatively curved compact surfaces, served as important models in their day. In the last few years there have been advances in the understanding of the structure of fundamental groups of negatively curved manifolds, some of them based on examples from analytic number theory. Here I describe one of these developments and pose a few difficult combinatorial questions.

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