The isomorphism problem was formulated by Max Dehn,[1] and together with the word problem and conjugacy problem, is one of three fundamental decision problems in group theory he identified in 1911.[2] All three problems, formulated as ranging over all finitely presented groups, are undecidable. In the case of the isomorphism problem, this means that there does not exist a computer algorithm that takes two finite group presentations and decides whether or not the groups are isomorphic, regardless of how (finitely) much time is allowed for the algorithm to run and how (finitely) much memory is available. In fact the problem of deciding whether a finitely presented group is trivial is undecidable,[3] a consequence of the Adian–Rabin theorem due to Sergei Adian and Michael O. Rabin.
The group isomorphism problem, restricted to the groups that are given by multiplication tables, can be reduced to a graph isomorphism problem but not vice versa.[8] Both have quasi-polynomial-time algorithms, the former since 1978 attributed to Robert Tarjan[9] and the latter since 2015 by László Babai.[10] A small but important improvement for the case p-groups of class 2 was obtained in 2023 by Xiaorui Sun.[11][8]