This result has important applications in
combinatorial group theory: • If
G is a nontrivial finite
p-group, then
r >
d2/4 where
d = dim
H1(
G,
Z/
pZ) and
r = dim
H2(
G,
Z/
pZ) (the mod
p cohomology groups of
G). In particular if
G is a finite
p-group with minimal number of generators
d and has
r relators in a given presentation, then
r >
d2/4. • For each prime
p, there is an infinite group
G generated by three elements in which each element has order a power of
p. The group
G provides a
counterexample to the
generalised Burnside conjecture: it is a
finitely generated infinite
torsion group, although there is no uniform bound on the order of its elements. In
class field theory, the
class field tower of a
number field K is created by iterating the
Hilbert class field construction. The class field tower problem asks whether this tower is always finite; attributed this question to Furtwangler, though Furtwangler said he had heard it from Schreier. Another consequence of the Golod–Shafarevich theorem is that such
towers may be
infinite (in other words, do not always terminate in a field equal to its
Hilbert class field). Specifically, • Let
K be an
imaginary quadratic field whose
discriminant has at least 6 prime factors. Then the maximal unramified 2-extension of
K has infinite degree. More generally, a number field with sufficiently many prime factors in the discriminant has an infinite class field tower. ==References==