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Motivation for Study:
I'm doing some light reading of some notes by Miller on combinatorial group theory. Hopfian groups have just been defined. Whilst I've seen the term used countless times before now, I have not yet once played with it. So here goes . . .
The Details:
The following is the definition I'm working with.
Definition: A group $G$ is hopfian if whenever $G/N\cong G$, we have that $N$ is the trivial group.
Lemma: Any group $G$ is hopfian iff every epimorphism $\alpha: G\to G$ is an automorphism.
The proof of this Lemma seems elementary to me, so, with a few qualms, I'll leave it out.
The Question:
Question: (G. Higman) Show that the group $H$ with presentation $$\langle a,p,q\mid p^{-1}ap=a^2, q^{-1}aq=a^2\rangle$$ is non-hopfian.
For extra credit to those that answer (but no promised bounty):
Complete the exercise from first principles, please; that is, without any fancy footwork, so as to make clear the concept of (not) being hopfian.
My Attempt:
My goal is to exhibit an epimorphism $\psi: G\to G$ that is not an automorphism.
Define $\psi$ by
$$\begin{align} p &\mapsto p,\\ q &\mapsto q,\\ a &\mapsto a^2. \end{align}$$
Would this work? I'm not sure of whether it's an epimorphism, let alone not an automorphism.
I have $$\psi(p)\psi(q)=pq\stackrel{?}{=}\psi(pq)$$ (because $\psi$ is defined on the generators, right? So the same must be for the $qp$ case; the $\psi(a^2)=\psi(a)\psi(a)$ case is trivial).
Moreover, I have, since $a^2p=pa$ by the first relation, that $$\psi(a)\psi(p)=a^2p=pa\stackrel{?}{=}\psi(ap);$$ the $\psi(aq)$ bit is similar.
What I'm struggling with is $\psi(p)\psi(a)=pa^2$ and so on.
Please help :)
Disclaimer:
I'm in hospital at the moment and so I'm on a break from my PhD. (I've been here a month now.) The above is just for fun and has little if anything at all, a priori, to do with my research.