My lecture note glosses over it really, introduces it and says "well it intuitively makes sense" but I say, nope it doesn't.
Free groups on generators $x_1,...,x_m,x_1^{-1},...,x_m^{-1}$ is a group whose elements are words in the symbols $x_1,...,x_m,x_1^{-1},...,x_m^{-1}$ subject to the group axioms. The group operation is concatenation.
What do I not understand? Well, to star with, where's the identity? The operation, say I denote it $*$, is $x_1 * x_2=x_1x_2$ yes? How is the identity defined? I mean, $e*x_1=ex_1$ because it's "concatenation" so I cannot conveniently say $e*x_1=x_1$ and ignore the fact I need to "concatenate" it. These are apparently words, symbols not numbers. The inverse doesn't make sense too, $x_1*x_1^{-1}=x_1x_1^{-1}$ and period. Not $x_1*x_1^{-1}=e$. I mean, I don't even know what $e$ is supposed to be in this supposedly group object so I am left puzzled.
I don't see any mathematics here, concatenation, in other words, is just "lining up the symbols in order." It's not like $1 \times 2 \times 10=20$ but $1 \times 2 \times 20=1220$.
And another problem. Doesn't the free group have order infinity? It can't be finite can it? Because, say I start with $x_1,...,x_m,x_1^{-1},...,x_m^{-1}$ but it must be closed under concatenation. Well, $x_1*x_2=x_1x_2$ already causes an issue because clearly we just created a new element. A new word $x_1x_2$. Continuing this way, we keep adding the newly created words and reach infinity.
And before someone directs me to it, no, wikipedia's page on free groups didn't help me understand this either.
This bizarre notion is confusing and incomprehensible than ever. Does anyone know the answers to my questions?
A free group consists of strings. You form those strings out of an alphabet of symbols of the form $x_i$ and $x_i^{-1}$. The identity is the empty string - the string with no letters in it.
They don't do it, but it might help to imagine quotes around the strings. So that '$abc$' * '$de$' = '$abcde$'. Clearly adding nothing to the end of a string gives you back that string: '$xyz^{-1}$' * ' ' = '$xyz^{-1}$'
Don't think of $e$ as the identity because you will be confusing letters in the alphabet of the free group with symbols that represent particular strings made from letters in the alphabet of the free group. I've see at least one book that used the Greek letter $\iota$ (iota) to represent the empty string: $\iota =$ ' '.
For example, when a letter and its inverse are next to each other, they cancel each other out: '$aa^{-1}$' = ' '; or '$aa^{-1}$' = $\iota$.
So, in a free group, you can concatenate two strings and end up with a smaller string.
Yes, this is mathematics. Yes it is not arithmetic. One is much more general than the other.
Every member of a free group, except for the empty string $\iota$ = ' ', is of infinite order. No matter how many $x$'s are in the (finite) string '$xxx \dots x$', you are never going to end up with the empty string.
Now I need to contradict myself. I said that a free group consists of strings. That is not true. Because of the existence of inverse letters, $x_i^{-1}$, some strings can be simplified (reduced). It takes a lot of effort, but it can be shown that, no matter what order of operations you use to reduce a string, you will always end up with the same answer. The members of a free group consists of equivalence classes of the form $[xyz]$ where $[xyz]$ is the set of all strings that reduce to the same string as 'xyz'does.