of the 27-element free Burnside group of rank 2 and exponent 3. Part of the difficulty with the general Burnside problem is that the requirements of being finitely generated and periodic give very little information about the possible structure of a group. Therefore, we pose more requirements on
G. Consider a periodic group
G with the additional property that there exists a least integer
n such that for all
g in
G,
gn = 1. A group with this property is said to be
periodic with bounded exponent n, or just a
group with exponent n. The Burnside problem for groups with bounded exponent asks:
Burnside problem I. If
G is a finitely generated group with exponent
n, is
G necessarily finite? It turns out that this problem can be restated as a question about the finiteness of groups in a particular family. The
free Burnside group of rank
m and exponent
n, denoted B(
m,
n), is a group with
m distinguished generators
x1, ...,
xm in which the identity
xn = 1 holds for all elements
x, and which is the "largest" group satisfying these requirements. More precisely, the characteristic property of B(
m,
n) is that, given any group
G with
m generators
g1, ...,
gm and of exponent
n, there is a unique homomorphism from B(
m,
n) to
G that maps the
ith generator
xi of B(
m,
n) into the
ith generator
gi of
G. In the language of
group presentations, the free Burnside group B(
m,
n) has
m generators
x1, ...,
xm and the relations
xn = 1 for each word
x in
x1, ...,
xm, and any group
G with
m generators of exponent
n is obtained from it by imposing additional relations. The existence of the free Burnside group and its uniqueness up to an isomorphism are established by standard techniques of group theory. Thus if
G is any finitely generated group of exponent
n, then
G is a
homomorphic image of B(
m,
n), where
m is the number of generators of
G. The Burnside problem for groups with bounded exponent can now be restated as follows:
Burnside problem II. For which positive integers
m,
n is the free Burnside group B(
m,
n) finite? The full solution to Burnside problem in this form is not known. Burnside considered some easy cases in his original paper: • B(1,
n) is the
cyclic group of order
n. • B(
m, 2) is the
direct product of
m copies of the cyclic group of order 2 and hence finite. The following additional results are known (Burnside, Sanov,
M. Hall): • B(
m, 3), B(
m, 4), and B(
m, 6) are finite for all
m. The particular case of B(2, 5) remains open. The breakthrough in solving the Burnside problem was achieved by
Pyotr Novikov and
Sergei Adian in 1968. Using a complicated combinatorial argument, they demonstrated that for every
odd number
n with
n > 4381, there exist infinite, finitely generated groups of exponent
n. Adian later improved the bound on the odd exponent to 665. In 2015, Adian claimed to have obtained a lower bound of 101 for odd
n; however, the full proof of this lower bound was never completed and never published. The case of even exponent turned out to be considerably more difficult. It was only in 1994 that Sergei Vasilievich Ivanov was able to prove an analogue of Novikov–Adian theorem: for any
m > 1 and an even
n ≥ 248,
n divisible by 29, the group B(
m,
n) is infinite; together with the Novikov–Adian theorem, this implies infiniteness for all
m > 1 and
n ≥ 248. This was improved in 1996 by I. G. Lysënok to
m > 1 and
n ≥ 8000. Novikov–Adian, Ivanov and Lysënok established considerably more precise results on the structure of the free Burnside groups. In the case of the odd exponent, all finite subgroups of the free Burnside groups were shown to be cyclic groups. In the even exponent case, each finite subgroup is contained in a product of two
dihedral groups, and there exist non-cyclic finite subgroups. Moreover, the
word and
conjugacy problems were shown to be effectively solvable in B(
m,
n) both for the cases of odd and even exponents
n. A famous class of counterexamples to the Burnside problem is formed by finitely generated non-cyclic infinite groups in which every nontrivial proper subgroup is a finite
cyclic group, the so-called
Tarski Monsters. First examples of such groups were constructed by
A. Yu. Ol'shanskii in 1979 using geometric methods, thus affirmatively solving O. Yu. Schmidt's problem. In 1982 Ol'shanskii was able to strengthen his results to establish existence, for any sufficiently large
prime number p (one can take
p > 1075) of a finitely generated infinite group in which every nontrivial proper subgroup is a
cyclic group of order
p. In a paper published in 1996, Ivanov and Ol'shanskii solved an analogue of the Burnside problem in an arbitrary
hyperbolic group for sufficiently large exponents. == Restricted Burnside problem ==