Resumo:
In the mid 1960’s, the german mathematician Hans J. Zassenhaus, inspired by Gram
Higman’s thesis and the work of Ian Hughes and Kenneth R. Pearson, stated several
conjectures that changed radically the field of research in group rings. Since then many
papers have been published about these conjectures, where either an affirmative answer
is settled for some specific case, or some counterexamples are determined. Still, it is only
very recently that Florian Eisele and Leo Margolis, based on some joint work with Ángel
del Río, have found a counterexample for the only conjecture which has been left open.
This fact motivated the writing of this dissertation. Our first goal is to revise the notions
necessary to understand the conjectures, where they sit in the theory of group rings,
and how they relate to representation theory. Then, we describe the counterexamples
in an elementary way, in order to simplify the reading of some of their properties. For
instance, we determine their character tables. We also point out, still omitting most of
the details, which are the techniques involved in the proof that these groups are indeed
counterexamples.