GTC PDF
GTC PDF
GTC PDF
J.S. Milne
S3
1 2 3
r D
2 3 1
1 2 3
f D
1 3 2
Version 3.14
March 17, 2017
The first version of these notes was written for a first-year graduate algebra course. As in
most such courses, the notes concentrated on abstract groups and, in particular, on finite
groups. However, it is not as abstract groups that most mathematicians encounter groups,
but rather as algebraic groups, topological groups, or Lie groups, and it is not just the groups
themselves that are of interest, but also their linear representations. It is my intention (one
day) to expand the notes to take account of this, and to produce a volume that, while still
modest in size (c200 pages), will provide a more comprehensive introduction to group theory
for beginning graduate students in mathematics, physics, and related fields.
BibTeX information
@misc{milneGT,
author={Milne, James S.},
title={Group Theory (v3.13)},
year={2013},
note={Available at www.jmilne.org/math/},
pages={127}
}
The multiplication table of S3 on the front page was produced by Group Explorer.
Copyright
1996–2017
c J.S. Milne.
Single paper copies for noncommercial personal use may be made without explicit permission
from the copyright holder.
Contents
Contents 3
3
The Sylow theorems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Alternative approach to the Sylow theorems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Exercises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Bibliography 131
Index 133
4
N OTATIONS .
We use the standard (Bourbaki) notations: N D f0; 1; 2; : : :g; Z is the ring of integers; Q
is the field of rational numbers; R is the field of real numbers; C is the field of complex
numbers; Fq is a finite field with q elements where q is a power of a prime number. In
particular, Fp D Z=pZ for p a prime number.
For integers m and n, mjn means that m divides n, i.e., n 2 mZ. Throughout the notes,
p is a prime number, i.e., p D 2; 3; 5; 7; 11; : : : ; 1000000007; : : :.
Given an equivalence relation, Œ denotes the equivalence class containing . The empty
set is denoted by ;. The cardinality of a set S is denoted by jS j (so jSj is the number of
elements in S when S is finite). Let I and A be sets; a family of elements of A indexed by
I , denoted .ai /i 2I , is a function i 7! ai W I ! A.1
Rings are required to have an identity element 1, and homomorphisms of rings are
required to take 1 to 1. An element a of a ring is a unit if it has an inverse (element b such
that ab D 1 D ba). The identity element of a ring is required to act as 1 on a module over
the ring.
X Y X is a subset of Y (not necessarily proper);
def
X DY X is defined to be Y , or equals Y by definition;
X Y X is isomorphic to Y ;
X 'Y X and Y are canonically isomorphic (or there is a given or unique isomorphism);
P REREQUISITES
An undergraduate “abstract algebra” course.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I thank the following for providing corrections and comments for earlier versions of these
notes: V.V. Acharya; Yunghyun Ahn; Tony Bruguier; Dustin Clausen; Benoı̂t Claudon; Keith
Conrad; Demetres Christofides; Adam Glesser; Darij Grinberg; Sylvan Jacques; Martin
Klazar; Mark Meckes; Victor Petrov; Diego Silvera; Efthymios Sofos; Dave Simpson;
David Speyer; Robert Thompson; Bhupendra Nath Tiwari; Leandro Vendramin; Michiel
Vermeulen.
Also, I have benefited from the posts to mathoverflow by Richard Borcherds, Robin
Chapman, Steve Dalton, Leonid Positselski, Noah Snyder, Richard Stanley, Qiaochu Yuan,
and others (a reference monnnn means http://mathoverflow.net/questions/nnnn/
and a reference sxnnnn means http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/nnnn/).
1A family should be distinguished from a set. For example, if f is the function Z ! Z=3Z sending an
integer to its equivalence class, then ff .i/ j i 2 Zg is a set with three elements whereas .f .i//i 2Z is family with
an infinite index set.
5
The theory of groups of finite order may be said to date from the time of Cauchy. To
him are due the first attempts at classification with a view to forming a theory from a
number of isolated facts. Galois introduced into the theory the exceedingly important
idea of a [normal] sub-group, and the corresponding division of groups into simple
and composite. Moreover, by shewing that to every equation of finite degree there
corresponds a group of finite order on which all the properties of the equation depend,
Galois indicated how far reaching the applications of the theory might be, and thereby
contributed greatly, if indirectly, to its subsequent developement.
Many additions were made, mainly by French mathematicians, during the middle
part of the [nineteenth] century. The first connected exposition of the theory was
given in the third edition of M. Serret’s “Cours d’Algèbre Supérieure,” which was
published in 1866. This was followed in 1870 by M. Jordan’s “Traité des substitutions
et des équations algébriques.” The greater part of M. Jordan’s treatise is devoted to a
developement of the ideas of Galois and to their application to the theory of equations.
No considerable progress in the theory, as apart from its applications, was made
till the appearance in 1872 of Herr Sylow’s memoir “Théorèmes sur les groupes de
substitutions” in the fifth volume of the Mathematische Annalen. Since the date of this
memoir, but more especially in recent years, the theory has advanced continuously.
Galois introduced the concept of a normal subgroup in 1832, and Camille Jordan in the
preface to his Traité. . . in 1870 flagged Galois’ distinction between groupes simples
and groupes composées as the most important dichotomy in the theory of permutation
groups. Moreover, in the Traité, Jordan began building a database of finite simple
groups — the alternating groups of degree at least 5 and most of the classical projective
linear groups over fields of prime cardinality. Finally, in 1872, Ludwig Sylow published
his famous theorems on subgroups of prime power order.
It is unlikely that there is any easy reason why a classification is possible, unless
someone comes up with a completely new way to classify groups. One problem, at
least with the current methods of classification via centralizers of involutions, is that
every simple group has to be tested to see if it leads to new simple groups containing it
in the centralizer of an involution. For example, when the baby monster was discovered,
it had a double cover, which was a potential centralizer of an involution in a larger
simple group, which turned out to be the monster. The monster happens to have no
double cover so the process stopped there, but without checking every finite simple
group there seems no obvious reason why one cannot have an infinite chain of larger
and larger sporadic groups, each of which has a double cover that is a centralizer of
an involution in the next one. Because of this problem (among others), it was unclear
until quite late in the classification whether there would be a finite or infinite number of
sporadic groups.
.a; b/ 7! a bW G G ! G
.a b/ c D a .b c/I
for all a 2 G;
G3: (existence of inverses) for each a 2 G, there exists an a0 2 G such that
a a0 D e D a0 a:
We usually abbreviate .G; / to G. Also, we usually write ab for a b and 1 for e; al-
ternatively, we write a C b for a b and 0 for e. In the first case, the group is said to be
multiplicative, and in the second, it is said to be additive.
7
8 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
(a) An element e satisfying (1) is called a neutral element. If e 0 is a second such element,
then e 0 D e e 0 D e. In fact, e is the unique element of G such that e e D e (apply
G3).
(b) If b a D e and a c D e, then
b D b e D b .a c/ D .b a/ c D e c D c:
Note that the expression within each pair of parentheses is well defined because of the
induction hypotheses. Thus, if i D j , (2) equals (3). If i ¤ j , we may suppose i < j .
Then
.a1 ai /.ai C1 an / D .a1 ai / .ai C1 aj /.aj C1 an /
.a1 aj /.aj C1 an / D .a1 ai /.ai C1 aj / .aj C1 an /
ab D ac H) b D c; ba D ca H) b D c
Two groups .G; / and .G 0 ; 0 / are isomorphic if there exists a one-to-one correspon-
dence a $ a0 , G $ G 0 , such that .a b/0 D a0 0 b 0 for all a; b 2 G.
The order jGj of a group G is its cardinality. A finite group whose order is a power of a
prime p is called a p-group.
For an element a of a group G, define
8
< aa a n > 0 .n copies of a/
n
a D e nD0
a 1 a 1 a 1 n < 0 (jnj copies of a 1 )
:
Definitions and examples 9
an D e ” mjn:
E XAMPLES
1.3 Let C1 be the group .Z; C/, and, for an integer m 1, let Cm be the group .Z=mZ; C/.
1.4 Permutation groups. Let S be a set and let Sym.S / be the set of bijections ˛W S ! S .
We define the product of two elements of Sym.S / to be their composite:
˛ˇ D ˛ ı ˇ:
In other words, .˛ˇ/.s/ D ˛.ˇ.s// for all s 2 S . For any ˛; ˇ; 2 Sym.S / and s 2 S ,
and so associativity holds. The identity map s 7! s is an identity element for Sym.S /, and
inverses exist because we required the elements of Sym.S / to be bijections. Therefore
Sym.S / is a group, called the group of symmetries of S . For example, the permutation
group on n letters Sn is defined to be the group of symmetries of the set f1; :::; ng — it has
order nŠ.
1.5 When G and H are groups, we can construct a new group G H , called the (direct)
product of G and H . As a set, it is the cartesian product of G and H , and multiplication is
defined by
.g; h/.g 0 ; h0 / D .gg 0 ; hh0 /:
ab D ba; all a; b 2 G:
In a commutative group, the product of any finite (not necessarily ordered) family S of
elements is well defined, for example, the empty product is e. Usually, we write commutative
groups additively. With this notation, Equation (4) becomes:
When G is commutative,
1.7 Let F be a field. The n n matrices with coefficients in F and nonzero determinant
form a group GLn .F / called the general linear group of degree n. For a finite dimensional
F -vector space V , the F -linear automorphisms of V form a group GL.V / called the general
linear group of V . Note that if V has dimension n, then the choice of a basis determines an
isomorphism GL.V / ! GLn .F / sending an automorphism to its matrix with respect to the
basis.
1.8 Let V be a finite dimensional vector space over a field F . A bilinear form on V is a
mapping W V V ! F that is linear in each variable. An automorphism of such a is an
isomorphism ˛W V ! V such that
The automorphisms of form a group Aut./. Let e1 ; : : : ; en be a basis for V , and let
P D ..ei ; ej //1i;j n
be the matrix of . The choice of the basis identifies Aut./ with the group of invertible
matrices A such that2
AT P A D P . (7)
When is symmetric, i.e.,
and nondegenerate, Aut./ is called the symplectic group of . In this case, there exists a
basis for V for which the matrix of is
0 Im
J2m D ; 2m D n;
Im 0
2 When we use the basis to identify V with F n , the pairing becomes
0 1 0 1
a1 ! b1 b1
:: ; @ :: A 7! .a ; : : : ; an / P @ :: A :
: 1
: :
an bn bn
a1 ! a1 !
If A is the matrix of ˛ with respect to the basis, then ˛ corresponds to the map :: 7! A :: :Therefore,
: :
an an
(6) becomes the statement that
0 1 0 1 0 1
b1 b1 a1 ! b1
.a1 ; : : : ; an / AT P A @ :: A D .a1 ; : : : ; an / P @ :: A for all :: ; @ :: A 2 F n :
: : : :
bn bn an bn
On examining this statement on the standard basis vectors for F n, we see that it is equivalent to (7).
Multiplication tables 11
A SIDE 1.10 (a) The group conditions (G2,G3) can be replaced by the following weaker conditions
(existence of a left neutral element and left inverses): (G20 ) there exists an e such that e a D a for
all a; (G30 ) for each a 2 G, there exists an a0 2 G such that a0 a D e. To see that these imply (G2)
and (G3), let a 2 G, and apply (G30 ) to find a0 and a00 such that a0 a D e and a00 a0 D e. Then
a a0 D e .a a0 / D .a00 a0 / .a a0 / D a00 .a0 a/ a0 D a00 a0 D e;
Multiplication tables
A binary operation on a finite set can be described by its multiplication table:
e a b c :::
e ee ea eb ec :::
a ae a2 ab ac :::
b be ba b2 bc :::
c ce ca cb c2 :::
:: :: :: :: ::
: : : : :
12 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
The element e is an identity element if and only if the first row and column of the table
simply repeat the elements. Inverses exist if and only if each element occurs exactly once
in each row and in each column (see 1.2e). If there are n elements, then verifying the
associativity law requires checking n3 equalities.
For the multiplication table of S3 , see the front page. Note that each colour occurs
exactly once in each row and and each column.
This suggests an algorithm for finding all groups of a given finite order n, namely, list
all possible multiplication tables and check the axioms. Except for very small n, this is not
practical! The table has n2 positions, and if we allow each position to hold any of the n
2
elements, then that gives a total of nn possible tables very few of which define groups. For
example, there are 864 D 6277 101 735 386 680 763 835 789 423 207 666 416 102 355 444 464
034 512 896 binary operations on a set with 8 elements, but only five isomorphism classes of
groups of order 8 (see 4.21).
Subgroups
P ROPOSITION 1.11 Let S be a nonempty subset of a group G. If
S1: a; b 2 S H) ab 2 S, and
S2: a 2 S H) a 1 2 S;
then the binary operation on G makes S into a group.
P ROOF. (S1) implies that the binary operation on G defines a binary operation S S ! S
on S , which is automatically associative. By assumption S contains at least one element a,
its inverse a 1 , and the product e D aa 1 . Finally (S2) shows that the inverses of elements
in S lie in S. 2
It is a subgroup of G.
The subgroup S given by the proposition is denoted hXi, and is called the subgroup
generated by X. For example, h;i D feg. If every element of X has finite order, for example,
if G is finite, then the set of all finite products of elements of X is already a group and so
equals hXi.
We say that X generates G if G D hXi, i.e., if every element of G can be written as a
finite product of elements from X and their inverses. Note that the order of an element a of
a group is the order of the subgroup hai it generates.
E XAMPLES
1.16 The cyclic groups. A group is said to be cyclic if it is generated by a single element,
i.e., if G D hri for some r 2 G. If r has finite order n, then
G D fe; r; r 2 ; :::; r n 1
g Cn ; ri $ i mod n;
and G can be thought of as the group of rotational symmetries about the centre of a regular
polygon with n-sides. If r has infinite order, then
i 1
G D f: : : ; r ;:::;r ; e; r; : : : ; r i ; : : :g C1 ; r i $ i:
Thus, up to isomorphism, there is exactly one cyclic group of order n for each n 1. In
future, we shall loosely use Cn to denote any cyclic group of order n (not necessarily Z=nZ
or Z).
s s
1
1 r
8
r < 1$1
1$1
sD sD 2$4
2$3 2 4
3$3
:
r D1!2!3!1
2 3 r D1!2!3!4!1
r n D eI s 2 D eI srs D r 1
(so sr D r n 1
s/:
Dn D fe; r; :::; r n 1
; s; rs; :::; r n 1
sg;
and it is clear from the geometry that the elements of the set are distinct, and so jDn j D 2n.
Let t be the reflection in the line through the midpoint of the side joining the vertices 1
and 2 and the centre of the polygon (so i 7! n C 3 i mod n/. Then r D t s, because
s t
i 7! n C 2 i 7! n C 3 .n C 2 i/ D i C 1 mod n:
s 2 D e; t 2 D e; .t s/n D e D .st /n :
a4 D e; a2 D b 2 ; bab 1
D a3 (so ba D a3 b).
The group Q can also be described as the subset f˙1; ˙i; ˙j; ˙kg of the quaternion algebra
H. Recall that
H D R1 ˚ Ri ˚ Rj ˚ Rk
with the multiplication determined by
i 2 D 1 D j 2; ij D k D j i:
1.19 Recall that Sn is the permutation group on f1; 2; :::; ng. A transposition is a permu-
tation that interchanges two elements and leaves all other elements unchanged. It is not
difficult to see that Sn is generated by transpositions (see (4.26) below for a more precise
statement).
Groups of small order 15
For each prime p, there is only one group of order p, namely Cp (see 1.28 below). In the
following table, c C n D t means that there are c commutative groups and n noncommutative
groups (up to isomorphism, of course).
Here ha; b j a5 D b 2 D c 2 D abci is the group with generators a and b and relations a5 D
b 2 D c 2 D abc (see Chapter 2). It is the dicyclic group.
Roughly speaking, the more high powers of primes divide n, the more groups of order n
there should be. In fact, if f .n/ is the number of isomorphism classes of groups of order n,
then
2 2
f .n/ n. 27 Co.1//e.n/
where e.n/ is the largest exponent of a prime dividing n and o.1/ ! 0 as e.n/ ! 1 (see
Pyber 1993).
By 2001, a complete irredundant list of groups of order 2000 had been found — up to
isomorphism, there are exactly 49,910,529,484 (Besche et al. 2001).5
5 In fact Besche et al. did not construct the groups of order 1024 individually, but it is known that there are
49487365422 groups of that order. The remaining 423164062 groups of order up to 2000 (of which 408641062
have order 1536) are available as libraries in GAP and Magma. I would guess that 2048 is the smallest number
such that the exact number of groups of that order is unknown (Derek Holt, mo46855; Nov 21, 2010).
16 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
Homomorphisms
D EFINITION 1.20 A homomorphism from a group G to a second G 0 is a map ˛W G ! G 0
such that ˛.ab/ D ˛.a/˛.b/ for all a; b 2 G. An isomorphism is a bijective homomorphism.
and so ˛.a 1 / D ˛.a/ 1 . It follows that (9) holds for all m 2 Z, and so a homomorphism of
commutative groups is also a homomorphism of Z-modules.
˛W G ! Sym.G/:
P ROOF. For a 2 G, define aL W G ! G to be the map x 7! ax (left multiplication by a). For
x 2 G,
.aL ı bL /.x/ D aL .bL .x// D aL .bx/ D abx D .ab/L .x/;
and so .ab/L D aL ı bL . As eL D id, this implies that
1 1
aL ı .a /L D id D .a /L ı aL ;
Cosets
For a subset S of a group G and an element a of G, we let
aS D fas j s 2 Sg
Sa D fsa j s 2 Sg:
Because of the associativity law, a.bS / D .ab/S , and so we can denote this set unambigu-
ously by abS:
When H is a subgroup of G, the sets of the form aH are called the left cosets of H
in G, and the sets of the form Ha are called the right cosets of H in G. Because e 2 H ,
aH D H if and only if a 2 H .
E XAMPLE 1.24 Let G D .R2 ; C/, and let H be a subspace of dimension 1 (line through
the origin). Then the cosets (left or right) of H are the lines a C H parallel to H .
.G W 1/ D .G W H /.H W 1/:
In particular, the order of every subgroup of a finite group divides the order of the group.
P ROOF. The left cosets of H in G form a partition of G, there are .G W H / of them, and
each left coset has .H W 1/ elements. 2
C OROLLARY 1.27 The order of each element of a finite group divides the order of the
group.
6 More formally, .G W H / is the cardinality of the set faH j a 2 Gg.
18 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
E XAMPLE 1.28 If G has order p, a prime, then every element of G has order 1 or p. But
only e has order 1, and so G is generated by any element a ¤ e. In particular, G is cyclic
and so G Cp . This shows, for example, that, up to isomorphism, there is only one group
of order 1; 000; 000; 007 (because this number is prime). In fact there are only two groups of
order 1; 000; 000; 014; 000; 000; 049 (see 4.18).
1.30 Lagrange’s theorem has a partial converse: if a prime p divides m D .G W 1/, then G
has an element of order p (Cauchy’s theorem 4.13); if a prime power p n divides m, then G
has a subgroup of order p n (Sylow’s theorem 5.2). However, note that the 4-group C2 C2
has order 4, but has no element of order 4, and A4 has order 12, but has no subgroup of order
6 (see Exercise 4-15).
.G W K/ D .G W H /.H W K/
(meaning either both are infinite or both are finite and equal).
F F
P ROOF. Write G D i 2I gi H (disjoint union), and H D F j 2J hj K (disjoint union). On
the second equality by gi , we find that gi H D j 2J gi hj K (disjoint union),
multiplying F
and so G D i;j 2I J gi hj K (disjoint union). This shows that
Normal subgroups
When S and T are two subsets of a group G, we let
S T D fst j s 2 S , t 2 T g:
Because of the associativity law, R.S T / D .RS /T , and so we can denote this set unambigu-
ously as RS T .
A subgroup N of G is normal, denoted N G G, if gNg 1 D N for all g 2 G.
R EMARK 1.32 To show that N is normal, it suffices to check that gNg 1 N for all g,
because multiplying this inclusion on the left and right with g 1 and g respectively gives
the inclusion N g 1 Ng, and rewriting this with g 1 for g gives that N gNg 1 for all
g. However, the next example shows that there can exist a subgroup N of a group G and an
element g of G such that gNg 1 N but gNg 1 ¤ N .
Normal subgroups 19
˚ 1n
ˇ
E XAMPLE 1.33 Let G D GL2 .Q/, and let H D 0 1
ˇ n 2 Z . Then H is a subgroup of
5 0
G; in fact H ' Z. Let g D 0 1 . Then
1
1 n 1 5 0 1 n 5 0 1 5n
g g D D :
0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1
1.35 The proposition says that, in order for N to be normal, we must have that for all
g 2 G and n 2 N , there exists an n0 2 N such that gn D n0 g (equivalently, for all g 2 G
and n 2 N , there exists an n0 such that ng D gn0 ). In other words, to say that N is normal
amounts to saying that an element of G can be moved past an element of N at the cost of
replacing the element of N by another element of N .
E XAMPLE 1.36 (a) Every subgroup of index two is normal. Indeed, let g 2 G X H . Then
G D H t gH (disjoint union). Hence gH is the complement of H in G. Similarly, Hg is
the complement of H in G, and so gH D Hg:
(b) Consider the dihedral group
Dn D fe; r; : : : ; r n 1
; s; : : : ; r n 1
sg:
Then Cn D fe; r; : : : ; r n 1g has index 2, and hence is normal. For n 3 the subgroup fe; sg
is not normal because r 1 sr D r n 2 s … fe; sg.
(c) Every subgroup of a commutative group is normal (obviously), but the converse
is false: the quaternion group Q is not commutative, but every subgroup is normal (see
Exercise 1-1).
A group G is said to be simple if it has no normal subgroups other than G and feg. Such
a group can still have lots of nonnormal subgroups — in fact, the Sylow theorems (Chapter
5) imply that every finite group has nontrivial subgroups unless it is cyclic of prime order.
1 1 1 1.35 1 0
.hn/ Dn h D h n 2 HN
20 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
it is also closed under the formation of inverses, and so HN is a subgroup. If both H and N
are normal, then
gHNg 1 D gHg 1 gNg 1 D HN
for all g 2 G. 2
As X is closed under conjugation, each gxi g 1 or its inverse lies in X, and so ghX ig 1
hX i. 2
1
S
L EMMA 1.39 For any subset X of G, the subset g2G gXg is normal, and it is the
smallest normal set containing X .
P ROOF. Obvious. 2
If ˛ is injective, then Ker.˛/ D feg. Conversely, if Ker.˛/ D feg, then ˛ is injective, because
For example, the kernel of the homomorphism detW GLn .F / ! F is the group of n n
matrices with determinant 1 — this group SLn .F / is called the special linear group of
degree n.
Theorems concerning homomorphisms 21
P ROPOSITION 1.42 Every normal subgroup occurs as the kernel of a homomorphism. More
precisely, if N is a normal subgroup of G, then there is a unique group structure on the set
G=N of cosets of N in G for which the natural map a 7! ŒaW G ! G=N is a homomorphism.
P ROOF. Write the cosets as left cosets, and define .aN /.bN / D .ab/N . We have to check
(a) that this is well-defined, and (b) that it gives a group structure on the set of cosets. It will
then be obvious that the map g 7! gN is a homomorphism with kernel N .
(a). Let aN D a0 N and bN D b 0 N ; we have to show that abN D a0 b 0 N . But
1.34 1.34
abN D a.bN / D a.b 0 N / D aN b 0 D a0 N b 0 D a0 b 0 N:
(b). The product is certainly associative, the coset N is an identity element, and a 1N
is an inverse for aN . 2
N G=N ! G 0 ;
˛W N
˛.gN / D ˛.g/;
N
˛..gN / .g 0 N // D ˛.gg
N 0
N / D ˛.gg 0 / D ˛.g/˛.g 0 / D ˛.gN
N N 0 N /.
/˛.g
E XAMPLE 1.44 (a) Consider the subgroup mZ of Z. The quotient group Z=mZ is a cyclic
group of order m.
(b) Let L be a line through the origin in R2 . Then R2 =L is isomorphic to R (because it
is a one-dimensional vector space over R).
(c) For n 2, the quotient Dn =hri D fe;N sN g (cyclic group of order 2).
FACTORIZATION OF HOMOMORPHISMS
Recall that the image of a map ˛W S ! T is ˛.S / D f˛.s/ j s 2 Sg.
T HEOREM 1.45 (H OMOMORPHISM T HEOREM ) For any homomorphism ˛W G ! G 0 of
groups, the kernel N of ˛ is a normal subgroup of G, the image I of ˛ is a subgroup of G 0 ,
and ˛ factors in a natural way into the composite of a surjection, an isomorphism, and an
injection:
˛
G G0
g7!gN surjective injective
gN 7!˛.g/
G=N isomorphism
I:
P ROOF. We have already seen (1.41) that the kernel is a normal subgroup of G. If b D ˛.a/
def
and b 0 D ˛.a0 /, then bb 0 D ˛.aa0 / and b 1 D ˛.a 1 /, and so I D ˛.G/ is a subgroup of
G 0 . The universal property of quotients (1.43) shows that the map x 7! ˛.x/W G ! I defines
a homomorphism ˛W N G=N ! I with ˛.gN N / D ˛.g/. The homomorphism ˛N is certainly
N
surjective, and if ˛.gN / D e, then g 2 Ker.˛/ D N , and so ˛N has trivial kernel. This implies
that it is injective (p. 20). 2
T HE ISOMORPHISM THEOREM
T HEOREM 1.46 (I SOMORPHISM T HEOREM ) Let H be a subgroup of G and N a normal
subgroup of G. Then HN is a subgroup of G, H \ N is a normal subgroup of H , and the
map
h.H \ N / 7! hN W H=H \ N ! HN=N
is an isomorphism.
P ROOF. We have already seen (1.37) that HN is a subgroup. Consider the map
H ! G=N; h 7! hN:
T HE CORRESPONDENCE THEOREM
The next theorem shows that if GN is a quotient group of G, then the lattice of subgroups in
GN captures the structure of the lattice of subgroups of G lying over the kernel of G ! G.
N
E XAMPLE 1.49 Let G D D4 and let N be its subgroup hr 2 i. Recall (1.17) that srs 1 D r 3 ,
2
and so sr 2 s 1 D r 3 D r 2 . Therefore N is normal. The groups G and G=N have the
following lattices of subgroups:
D4 D4 =hr 2 i
hsi hr 2 si hr 2 i hrsi hr 3 si 1
Direct products
Let G be a group, and let H1 ; : : : ; Hk be subgroups of G. We say that G is a direct product
of the subgroups Hi if the map
.h1 ; h2 ; : : : ; hk / 7! h1 h2 hk W H1 H2 Hk ! G
is an isomorphism of groups. This means that each element g of G can be written uniquely
in the form g D h1 h2 hk , hi 2 Hi , and that if g D h1 h2 hk and g 0 D h01 h02 h0k , then
gg 0 D .h1 h01 /.h2 h02 / .hk h0k /:
The following propositions give criteria for a group to be a direct product of subgroups.
24 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
Commutative groups
The classification of finitely generated commutative groups is most naturally studied as part
of the theory of modules over a principal ideal domain, but, for the sake of completeness, I
include an elementary exposition here.
Let M be a commutative group, written additively. The P subgroup hx1 ; : : : ; xk i of M
generated by the elements x1 ; : : : ; xk consists of the sums mi xi , mi 2 Z. A subset
fx1 ; : : : ; xk g of M is a basis for M if it generates M and
m1 x1 C C mk xk D 0; mi 2 Z H) mi xi D 0 for every iI
then
M D hx1 i ˚ ˚ hxk i:
T HEOREM 1.54 Every finitely generated commutative group M has a basis; hence it is a
finite direct sum of cyclic groups.
P ROOF. 8 We argue by induction on the number of generators of M . If M can be generated
by one element, the statement is trivial, and so we may assume that it requires at least k > 1
generators. Among the generating sets fx1 ; : : : ; xk g for M with k elements there is one for
which the order of x1 is the smallest possible. We shall show that M is then the direct sum
of hx1 i and hx2 ; : : : ; xk i. This will complete the proof, because the induction hypothesis
provides us with a basis for the second group, which together with x1 forms a basis for M .
If M is not the direct sum of hx1 i and hx2 ; : : : ; xk i, then there exists a relation
m1 x1 C m2 x2 C C mk xk D 0 (10)
with m1 x1 ¤ 0. After possibly changing the sign of some of the xi , we may suppose that
m1 ; : : : ; mk 2 N and m1 < order.x1 /. Let d D gcd.m1 ; : : : ; mk / > 0, and let ci D mi =d .
According to the lemma, there exists a generating set y1 ; : : : ; yk such that y1 D c1 x1 C C
ck xk . But
dy1 D m1 x1 C m2 x2 C C mk xk D 0
and d m1 < order.x1 /, and so this contradicts the choice of fx1 ; : : : ; xk g. 2
8 JohnStillwell tells me that, for finite commutative groups, this is similar to the first proof of the theorem,
given by Kronecker in 1870.
26 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
C OROLLARY 1.55 A finite commutative group is cyclic if, for each n > 0, it contains at
most n elements of order dividing n.
P ROOF. After the Theorem 1.54, we may suppose that G D Cn1 Cnr with ni 2 N.
If n divides ni and nj with i ¤ j , then G has more than n elements of order dividing n.
Therefore, the hypothesis implies that the ni are relatively prime. Let ai generate the i th
factor. Then .a1 ; : : : ; ar / has order n1 nr , and so generates G. 2
E XAMPLE 1.56 Let F be a field. The elements of order dividing n in F are the roots of
the polynomial X n 1. Because unique factorization holds in F ŒX , there are at most n of
these, and so the corollary shows that every finite subgroup of F is cyclic.
for certain prime powers piei (repetitions of primes allowed), and that the integers p1e1 ; : : : ; p et t
are uniquely determined by M ; they are called the elementary divisors of M .
P ROOF. The first assertion is a restatement of Theorem 1.54.
(a) For a prime p not dividing any of the ni ,
Cm Cn Cmn : (13)
Use (13) to decompose the Cni into products of cyclic groups of prime power order. Once
this has been achieved, (13)
Q can be used to combine factors to achieve a decomposition as in
(b); for example, Cns D Cpei where the product is over the distinct primes among the pi
i
and ei is the highest exponent for the prime pi .
In proving the uniqueness statements in (b) and (c), we can replace M with its torsion
subgroup (and so assume r D 0). A prime p will occur as one of the primes pi in (12) if
and only M has an element of order p, in which case p will occur exact a times where p a
Commutative groups 27
is the number of elements of order dividing p. Similarly, p 2 will divide some piei in (12)
if and only if M has an element of order p 2 , in which case it will divide exactly b of the
piei where p a b p 2b is the number of elements in M of order dividing p 2 . Continuing in
this fashion, we find that the elementary divisors of M can be read off from knowing the
numbers of elements of M of each prime power order.
The uniqueness of the invariant factors can be derived from that of the elementary
divisors, or it can be proved directly: ns is the smallest integer > 0 such that ns M D 0; ns 1
is the smallest integer > 0 such that ns 1 M is cyclic; ns 2 is the smallest integer such that
ns 2 can be expressed as a product of two cyclic groups, and so on. 2
S UMMARY 1.58 Each finite commutative group is isomorphic to exactly one of the groups
The order of this group is n1 nr . For example, each commutative group of order 90 is
isomorphic to exactly one of C90 or C3 C30 — to see this, note that the largest invariant
factor must be a factor of 90 divisible by all the prime factors of 90.
called the dual group of G. For example, the dual group Z_ of Z is isomorphic to .C/ by
the map 7! .1/.
A SIDE 1.61 The statement that the natural map G ! G __ is an isomorphism is a special case
of the Pontryagin theorem. For infinite groups, it is necessary to consider groups together with a
topology. For example, as we observed above, Z_ ' .C/. Each m 2 Z does define a character
7! m W .C/ ! .C/, but there are many homomorphisms .C/ ! .C/ not of this form, and
so the dual of .C/ is larger than Z. However, these are the only continuous homomorphisms. In
general, let G be a commutative group endowed with a locally compact topology9 for which the group
operations are continuous; then the group G _ of continuous characters G ! .C/ has a natural
topology for which it is locally compact, and the Pontryagin duality theorem says that the natural
map G ! G __ is an isomorphism.
In particular,
X jGj if is trivial
.a/ D
a2G 0 otherwise.
P ROOF. If D , then .a/ .a 1 / D 1, and so the sum is jGj. Otherwise there exists a
b 2 G such that .b/ ¤ .b/. As a runs over G, so also does ab, and so
X X X
.a/ .a 1 / D .ab/ ..ab/ 1 / D .b/ .b/ 1 .a/ .a 1 /:
a2G a2G a2G
1 1/
P
Because .b/ .b/ ¤ 1, this implies that a2G .a/ .a D 0. 2
The order of ab
Let a and b be elements of a group G. If a has order m and b has order n, what can we say
about the order of ab? The next theorem shows that we can say nothing at all.
T HEOREM 1.64 For any integers m; n; r > 1, there exists a finite group G with elements a
and b such that a has order m, b has order n, and ab has order r.
P ROOF. We shall show that, for a suitable prime power q, there exist elements a and b
of SL2 .Fq / such that a, b, and ab have orders 2m, 2n, and 2r respectively. As I is the
unique element of order 2 in SL2 .Fq /, the images of a, b, ab in SL2 .Fq /=f˙I g will then
have orders m, n, and r as required.
9 Following Bourbaki, I require locally compact spaces to be Hausdorff.
Exercises 29
Let p be a prime number not dividing 2mnr. Then p is a unit in the finite ring Z=2mnrZ,
and so some power of it, q say, is 1 in the ring. This means that 2mnr divides q 1. As the
group Fq has order q 1 and is cyclic (see 1.56), there exist elements u, v, and w of Fq
Therefore a has order 2m. Similarly b has order 2n. The matrix
v 1
uv C t
ab D ;
u 1t u 1v 1
X2 .uv C t C u 1
v 1
/X C 1 D .X w/.X w 1
/,
Exercises
1-1 Show that the quaternion group has only one element of order 2, and that it commutes
with all elements of Q. Deduce that Q is not isomorphic to D4 , and that every subgroup of
Q is normal.11
in GL2 .Z/. Show that a4 D 1 and b 3 D 1, but that ab has infinite order, and hence that the
group ha; bi is infinite.
1-3 Show that every finite group of even order contains an element of order 2.
1-4 Let n D n1 C C nr be Q
a partition of the positive integer n. Use Lagrange’s theorem
to show that nŠ is divisible by riD1 ni Š.
are the groups of the form Q A B with Q the quaternion group, A a commutative group whose elements
have finite odd order, and B a commutative group whose elements have order 2 (or 1). See Hall 1959, 12.5.4.
30 1. BASIC D EFINITIONS AND R ESULTS
1-6 A group G is said to have finite exponent if there exists an m > 0 such that am D e
for every a in G; the smallest such m is then called the exponent of G.
(a) Show that every group of exponent 2 is commutative.
(b) Show that, for an odd prime p, the group of matrices
80 1ˇ 9
< 1 a b ˇˇ =
@0 1 c A ˇ a; b; c 2 Fp
ˇ
0 0 1 ˇ
: ;
1-8 Show that a nonempty finite set with an associative binary operation satisfying the
cancellation laws is a group.
1-9 Let G be a set with an associative binary operation. Show that if left multiplication
x 7! ax by every element a is bijective and right multiplication by some element is injective,
then G is a group. Give an example to show that the second condition is needed.
mn D m0 n H) m D m0 :
It is frequently useful to describe a group by giving a set of generators for the group and a set
of relations for the generators from which every other relation in the group can be deduced.
For example, Dn can be described as the group with generators r; s and relations
r n D e; s 2 D e; srsr D e:
In this chapter, we make precise what this means. First we need to define the free group on a
set X of generators — this is a group generated by X and with no relations except for those
implied by the group axioms. Because inverses cause problems, we first do this for monoids.
Recall that a monoid is a set S with an associative binary operation having an identity
element e. A homomorphism ˛W S ! S 0 of monoids is a map such that ˛.ab/ D ˛.a/˛.b/
for all a; b 2 S and ˛.e/ D e — unlike the case of groups, the second condition is not
automatic. A homomorphism of monoids preserves all finite products.
Free monoids
Let X D fa; b; c; : : :g be a (possibly infinite) set of symbols. A word is a finite sequence of
symbols from X in which repetition is allowed. For example,
aa; aabac; b
are distinct words. Two words can be multiplied by juxtaposition, for example,
This defines on the set of all words an associative binary operation. The empty sequence
is allowed, and we denote it by 1. (In the unfortunate case that the symbol 1 is already an
element of X , we denote it by a different symbol.) Then 1 serves as an identity element.
Write SX for the set of words together with this binary operation. Then SX is a monoid,
called the free monoid on X .
31
32 2. F REE G ROUPS AND P RESENTATIONS ; C OXETER G ROUPS
Free groups
We want to construct a group FX containing X and having the same universal property as
SX with “monoid” replaced by “group”. Define X 0 to be the set consisting of the symbols
in X and also one additional symbol, denoted a 1 , for each a 2 X; thus
X 0 D fa; a 1
; b; b 1
; : : :g:
Let W 0 be the set of words using symbols from X 0 . This becomes a monoid under juxtaposi-
tion, but it is not a group because a 1 is not yet the inverse of a, and we can’t cancel out the
obvious terms in words of the following form:
1 1
aa or a a
6 a0 1 6 a0 a0 1 or a0 6 a0 1 6 a0
Free groups 33
where our original pair is underlined. But the word obtained after this cancellation is the
same as if our original pair were cancelled, and so we may cancel the original pair instead.
Thus we are back in the case just proved. 2
We say two words w; w 0 are equivalent, denoted w w 0 , if they have the same reduced
form. This is an equivalence relation (obviously).
w w0; v v 0 H) wv w 0 v 0 :
P ROOF. Let w0 and v0 be the reduced forms of w and of v. To obtain the reduced form
of wv, we can first cancel as much as possible in w and v separately, to obtain w0 v0 and
then continue cancelling. Thus the reduced form of wv is the reduced form of w0 v0 . A
similar statement holds for w 0 v 0 , but (by assumption) the reduced forms of w and v equal
the reduced forms of w 0 and v 0 , and so we obtain the same result in the two cases. 2
Let FX be the set of equivalence classes of words. Proposition 2.2 shows that the binary
operation on W 0 defines a binary operation on FX , which obviously makes it into a monoid.
It also has inverses, because
.ab gh/ h 1 g 1 b 1 a 1 1:
Thus FX is a group, called the free group on X. To summarize: the elements of FX are
represented by words in X 0 ; two words represent the same element of FX if and only if
they have the same reduced forms; multiplication is defined by juxtaposition; the empty
word represents 1; inverses are obtained in the obvious way. Alternatively, each element of
FX is represented by a unique reduced word; multiplication is defined by juxtaposition and
passage to the reduced form.
When we identify a 2 X with the equivalence class of the (reduced) word a, then X
becomes identified with a subset of FX — clearly it generates FX. The next proposition
is a precise statement of the fact that there are no relations among the elements of X when
regarded as elements of FX except those imposed by the group axioms.
P ROPOSITION 2.3 For any map of sets ˛W X ! G from X to a group G, there exists a
unique homomorphism FX ! G making the following diagram commute:
a 7! a
X FX
G:
FX
X ˛
0
F 0:
The free group on the set X D fag is simply the infinite cyclic group C1 generated by
a, but the free group on a set consisting of two elements is already very complicated.
I now discuss, without proof, some important results on free groups.
The best proof uses topology, and in particular covering spaces—see Serre 1980 or
Rotman 1995, Theorem 11.44.
Two free groups FX and F Y are isomorphic if and only if X and Y have the same
cardinality. Thus we can define the rank of a free group G to be the cardinality of any free
generating set (subset X of G for which the homomorphism FX ! G given by (2.3) is
an isomorphism). Let H be a finitely generated subgroup of a free group G. Then there
is an algorithm for constructing from any finite set of generators for H a free finite set of
generators. If G has finite rank n and .G W H / D i < 1, then H is free of rank
ni i C 1:
In particular, H may have rank greater than that of F (or even infinite rank2 ). For proofs,
see Rotman 1995, Chapter 11, and Hall 1959, Chapter 7.
1 Nielsen (1921) proved this for finitely generated subgroups, and in fact gave an algorithm for deciding
whether a word lies in the subgroup; Schreier (1927) proved the general case.
2 For example, the commutator subgroup of the free group on two generators has infinite rank.
Generators and relations 35
E XAMPLE 2.7 (a) The dihedral group Dn has generators r; s and defining relations
r n ; s 2 ; srsr:
For n D 3 this is the group Q of (1.18). In general, it has order 2n (for more on it, see
Exercise 2-5).
def
(c) Two elements a and b in a group commute if and only if their commutator Œa; b D
aba 1 b 1 is 1. The free abelian group on generators a1 ; : : : ; an has generators a1 ; a2 ; : : : ; an
and relations
Œai ; aj ; i ¤ j:
(d) Let G D hs; t j s 3 t; t 3 ; s 4 i. Then G D f1g because
s D ss 3 t D s 4 t D t
1 D s3t t 3
D s 3 ss 3
D s:
For the remaining examples, see Massey 1967, which contains a good account of the
interplay between group theory and topology. For example, for many types of topological
spaces, there is an algorithm for obtaining a presentation for the fundamental group.
(e) The fundamental group of the open disk with one point removed is the free group on
where is any loop around the point (ibid. II 5.1).
(f) The fundamental group of the sphere with r points removed has generators 1 ; :::; r
(i is a loop around the i th point) and a single relation
1 r D 1:
(g) The fundamental group of a compact Riemann surface of genus g has 2g generators
u1 ; v1 ; :::; ug ; vg and a single relation
u1 v1 u1 1 v1 1 ug vg ug 1 vg 1 D 1
n 1 n 2
3 Strictly speaking, I should say the relations a2 , a2 b 2, bab 1 a.
36 2. F REE G ROUPS AND P RESENTATIONS ; C OXETER G ROUPS
P ROPOSITION 2.8 Let G be the group defined by the presentation .X; R/. For any group
H and map of sets ˛W X ! H sending each element of R to 1 (in the obvious sense4 ), there
exists a unique homomorphism G ! H making the following diagram commute:
a 7! a
X G
H:
P ROOF. From the universal property of free groups (2.3), we know that ˛ extends to a
homomorphism FX ! H , which we again denote ˛. Let R be the image of R in FX . By
assumption R Ker.˛/, and therefore the normal subgroup N generated by R is contained
in Ker.˛/. By the universal property of quotients (see 1.43), ˛ factors through FX=N D G.
This proves the existence, and the uniqueness follows from the fact that we know the map on
a set of generators for X . 2
E XAMPLE 2.9 Let G D ha; b j an ; b 2 ; babai. We prove that G is isomorphic to the dihedral
group Dn (see 1.17). Because the elements r; s 2 Dn satisfy these relations, the map
fa; bg ! Dn ; a 7! r; b 7! s
an D 1; b 2 D 1; ba D an 1
b
1; : : : ; an 1
; b; ab; : : : ; an 1
b;
and so jGj 2n D jDn j. Therefore the homomorphism is bijective (and these symbols
represent distinct elements of G).
Similarly,
ha; b j a2 ; b 2 ; .ab/n i ' Dn
by a 7! s, b 7! t.
E XAMPLE 2.10 (a) Let G D hx; y j x m ; y n i where m; n > 1. Then x has order m, y has
order n, and xy has infinite order in G. To see this, recall that for any integers m; n; r > 1,
there exists a group H with elements a and b such that a, b, and ab have orders m, n, and r
respectively (Theorem 1.64). According to (2.8), there exists a homomorphism ˛W G ! H
such that ˛.x/ D a and ˛.y/ D b. The order of x certainly divides m, and the fact that ˛.x/
has order m shows that x has order exactly m. Similarly, y has order n. As ˛.xy/ D ab,
the element xy must have order at least r. As this is true for all r > 1, the element xy has
infinite order.
(b) Let G D hx; y j x m ; y n ; .xy/r i where m; n; r > 1. There exists a homomorphism
from G to the group in (1.64) sending x and y to a and b, which shows that x, y, and xy
4 Each
element of R represents an element of FX , and the condition requires that the unique extension of ˛
to FX sends each of these elements to 1.
Finitely presented groups 37
have orders m, n, and r in G. The group G may be finite or infinite, depending on the triple
.m; n; r/. These groups occur naturally as subgroups of index 2 in certain symmetry groups
— see the Wikipedia (Triangle group).
(c) Let G D SL2 .Z/=f˙I g, and let S and T be the elements of G represented by the
matrices 01 01 and 10 11 . Then S and S T generate G, and S 2 D 1 D .S T /3 (see Theorem
2.12 of my course notes on modular forms). It is known that this is a full set of relations
for S and S T in G, and so every group generated by an element of order 2 and an element
of order 3 is a quotient of G. Most finite simple groups of Lie type, and all but three of the
sporadic simple groups, fall into this class.
T HE WORD PROBLEM
Let G be the group defined by a finite presentation .X; R/. The word problem for G asks
whether there exists an algorithm (decision procedure) for deciding whether a word on X 0
represents 1 in G. The answer is negative: Novikov and Boone showed that there exist
finitely presented groups G for which no such algorithm exists. Of course, there do exist
other groups for which there is an algorithm.
The same ideas lead to the following result: there does not exist an algorithm that will
determine for an arbitrary finite presentation whether or not the corresponding group is
trivial, finite, abelian, solvable, nilpotent, simple, torsion, torsion-free, free, or has a solvable
word problem.
See Rotman 1995, Chapter 12, for proofs of these statements.
T HE B URNSIDE PROBLEM
Recall that a group is said to have exponent e if g e D 1 for all g 2 G and e is the smallest
natural number with this property. It is easy to write down examples of infinite groups
generated by a finite number of elements of finite order (see Exercise 1-2 or Example 2.10),
but does there exist such a group with finite exponent? (Burnside problem). In 1968, Adjan
and Novikov showed the answer is yes: there do exist infinite finitely generated groups of
finite exponent.
38 2. F REE G ROUPS AND P RESENTATIONS ; C OXETER G ROUPS
Coxeter groups
A Coxeter system is a pair .G; S / consisting of a group G and a set of generators S for G
subject only to relations of the form .st /m.s;t / D 1, where
8
< m.s; s/ D 1 all s;
m.s; t / 2 (14)
m.s; t / D m.t; s/:
:
When no relation occurs between s and t , we set m.s; t / D 1. Thus a Coxeter system is
defined by a set S and a mapping
mW S S ! N [ f1g
The Coxeter groups are those that arise as part of a Coxeter system. The cardinality of S is
called the rank of the Coxeter system.
E XAMPLES
2.12 Up to isomorphism, the only Coxeter system of rank 1 is .C2 ; fsg/.
G D hs; t j s 2 ; t 2 ; .st /n i.
(b) If m.s; t / D 1, then the Coxeter system is .G; fs; t g/ where G D hs; t j s 2 ; t 2 i. Ac-
cording to (2.10(a)), s and t each have order 2, and st has infinite order.
2.14 Let V D Rn endowed with the standard positive definite symmetric bilinear form
X
..xi /1i n ; .yi /1i n / D xi yi :
A reflection is a linear map sW V ! V sending some nonzero vector ˛ to ˛ and fixing the
points of the hyperplane H˛ orthogonal to ˛. We write s˛ for the reflection defined by ˛; it
is given by the formula
2.v; ˛/
s˛ v D v ˛;
.˛; ˛/
because this is certainly correct for v D ˛ and for v 2 H˛ , and hence (by linearity) on the
whole of V D h˛i ˚ H˛ . A finite reflection group is a finite group generated by reflections.
For such a group G, it is possible to choose a set S of generating reflections for which .G; S /
is a Coxeter system (Humphreys 1990, 1.9). Thus, the finite reflection groups are all Coxeter
groups (in fact, they are precisely the finite Coxeter groups, ibid., 6.4).
R EMARK 2.17 Let V be the R-vector space with basis a family .es /s2S indexed by S . The
standard proof of Theorem 2.16 defines a “geometry” on V for which there exist “reflections”
s , s 2 S, such that s t has order m.s; t /. According to (2.8), the map s 7! s extends
to homomorphism of group G ! GL.V /. This proves the theorem, and it realizes G as a
group of automorphisms of a “geometry”. See Humphreys 1990, Chapter 5, or v3.02 of
these notes.
Exercises
2-1 Let Dn D ha; bjan ; b 2 ; ababi be the nth dihedral group. If n is odd, prove that D2n
han i ha2 ; bi, and hence that D2n C2 Dn .
2-2 Prove that the group with generators a1 ; : : : ; an and relations Œai ; aj D 1, i ¤ j , is the
free abelian group on a1 ; : : : ; an . [Hint: Use universal properties.]
2-5 Prove that Qn (see 2.7b) has a unique subgroup of order 2, which is Z.Qn /. Prove
that Qn =Z.Qn / is isomorphic to D2n 2 .
2-8 Let F be the free group on the set fx; yg and let G D C2 , with generator a ¤ 1. Let ˛
be the homomorphism F ! G such that ˛.x/ D a D ˛.y/. Find a minimal generating set
for the kernel of ˛. Is the kernel a free group?
Coxeter came to Cambridge and gave a lecture [in which he stated a] problem for which he gave
proofs for selected examples, and he asked for a unified proof. I left the lecture room thinking.
As I was walking through Cambridge, suddenly the idea hit me, but it hit me while I was in
the middle of the road. When the idea hit me I stopped and a large truck ran into me. . . . So I
pretended that Coxeter had calculated the difficulty of this problem so precisely that he knew that
I would get the solution just in the middle of the road. . . . Ever since, I’ve called that theorem
“the murder weapon”. One consequence of it is that in a group if a2 D b 3 D c 5 D .abc/ 1, then
c 610 D 1.
Automorphisms of groups
An automorphism of a group G is an isomorphism of the group with itself. The set
Aut.G/ of automorphisms of G becomes a group under composition: the composite of two
automorphisms is again an automorphism; composition of maps is always associative (see
(5), p. 9); the identity map g 7! g is an identity element; an automorphism is a bijection, and
therefore has an inverse, which is again an automorphism.
For g 2 G, the map ig “conjugation by g”,
1
x 7! gxg WG!G
G=Z.G/ ! Inn.G/:
E XAMPLE 3.1 (a) Let G D Fpn . The automorphisms of G as a commutative group are just
the automorphisms of G as a vector space over Fp ; thus Aut.G/ D GLn .Fp /. Because G is
commutative, all nontrivial automorphisms of G are outer.
(b) As a particular case of (a), we see that
43
44 3. AUTOMORPHISMS AND E XTENSIONS
(c) Since the centre of the quaternion group Q is ha2 i, we have that
A SIDE 3.2 Let ˛ be an automorphism of a group H . If ˛ is inner, then it extends to every group G
containing H as a subgroup. The converse is also true (Schupp 1987).
C OMPLETE GROUPS
D EFINITION 3.3 A group G is complete if the map g 7! ig W G ! Aut.G/ is an isomor-
phism.
Thus, a group G is complete if and only if (a) the centre Z.G/ of G is trivial, and (b)
every automorphism of G is inner.
E XAMPLE 3.4 (a) For n ¤ 2; 6, Sn is complete. The group S2 is commutative and hence
fails (a); Aut.S6 /=Inn.S6 / C2 and hence S6 fails (b). See Rotman 1995, Theorems 7.5,
7.10.
(b) If G is a simple noncommutative group, then Aut.G/ is complete. See Rotman 1995,
Theorem 7.14.
Aut.Cn / ! .Z=nZ/
where
.Z=nZ/ D funits in the ring Z=nZg D fm C nZ j gcd.m; n/ D 1g:
This isomorphism is independent of the choice of a generator a for G: if ˛.a/ D am , then
for any other element b D ai of G,
is surjective with kernel of order p r 1 , and we know that .Z=pZ/ is cyclic. Let a 2
r r
.Z=p r Z/ map to a generator of .Z=pZ/ . Then ap .p 1/ D 1 and ap again maps to a
def r
generator of .Z=pZ/ . Therefore .Z=p r Z/ contains an element D ap of order p 1.
Using the binomial theorem, one finds that 1 C p has order p r 1 in .Z=p r Z/ . Therefore
.Z=p r Z/ is cyclic with generator .1 C p/ (cf. (13), p. 26), and every element can be
written uniquely in the form
is not cyclic.
S UMMARY 3.5 (a) For a cyclic group of G of order n, Aut.G/ ' .Z=nZ/ : The automor-
phism of G corresponding to Œm 2 .Z=nZ/ sends an element a of G to am .
(b) If n D p1r1 psrs is the factorization of n into a product of powers of distinct primes
pi , then
Characteristic subgroups
D EFINITION 3.6 A characteristic subgroup of a group G is a subgroup H such that
˛.H / D H for all automorphisms ˛ of G.
The same argument as in (1.32) shows that it suffices to check that ˛.H / H for all
˛ 2 Aut.G/. Thus, a subgroup H of G is normal if it is stable under all inner automorphisms
of G, and it is characteristic if it stable under all automorphisms. In particular, a characteristic
subgroup is normal.
R EMARK 3.7 (a) Consider a group G and a normal subgroup N . An inner automorphism
of G restricts to an automorphism of N , which may be outer (for an example, see 3.16
below). Thus a normal subgroup of N need not be a normal subgroup of G. However, a
characteristic subgroup of N will be a normal subgroup of G. Also a characteristic subgroup
of a characteristic subgroup is a characteristic subgroup.
46 3. AUTOMORPHISMS AND E XTENSIONS
and as g runs over G, ˛.g/ also runs over G. Expect subgroups with a general group-
theoretic definition to be characteristic.
(c) If H is the only subgroup of G of order m, then it must be characteristic, because
˛.H / is again a subgroup of G of order m.
(d) Every subgroup of a commutative group is normal but not necessarily character-
istic. For example, every subspace of dimension 1 in Fp2 is subgroup of Fp2 , but it is not
characteristic because it is not stable under Aut.Fp2 / D GL2 .Fp /.
Semidirect products
Let N be a normal subgroup of G. Each element g of G defines an automorphism of N ,
n 7! gng 1 , and this defines a homomorphism
W G ! Aut.N /; g 7! ig jN:
If there exists a subgroup Q of G such that G ! G=N maps Q isomorphically onto G=N ,
then I claim that we can reconstruct G from N , Q, and the restriction of to Q. Indeed, an
element g of G can be written uniquely in the form
g D nq; n 2 N; q 2 Q;
If g D nq and g 0 D n0 q 0 , then
gg 0 D .nq/ n0 q 0 D n.q n0 q 1
/qq 0 D n .q/.n0 / qq 0 :
N G G; NQ D G; N \ Q D f1g: (15)
Note that Q need not be a normal subgroup of G. When G is the semidirect product of
subgroups N and Q, we write G D N Ì Q (or N Ì Q where W Q ! Aut.N / gives the
action of Q on N by inner automorphisms).
Dn D hri Ì hsi D Cn Ì C2
(b) The alternating subgroup An is a normal subgroup of Sn (because it has index 2),
and C2 D f.12/g maps isomorphically onto Sn =An . Therefore Sn D An Ì C2 .
(c) The quaternion group can not be written as a semidirect product in any nontrivial
fashion (see Exercise 3-1).
(d) A cyclic group of order p 2 , p prime, is not a semidirect product (because it has only
one subgroup of order p).
(e) Let G D GLn .F /. Let B be the subgroup of upper triangular matrices in G, T the
subgroup of diagonal matrices in G, and U the subgroup of upper triangular matrices with
all their diagonal coefficients equal to 1. Thus, when n D 2,
0 1
BD ; T D ; UD .
0 0 0 1
Then, U is a normal subgroup of B, U T D B, and U \ T D f1g. Therefore,
B D U ÌT .
Note that, when n 2, the action of T on U is not trivial, for example,
a 1
a 0 1 c 0 1 ac=b
D ;
0 b 0 1 0 b 1 0 1
and so B is not the direct product of T and U .
E XAMPLES
3.11 A group of order 12. Let be the (unique) nontrivial homomorphism
C4 ! Aut.C3 / ' C2 ;
def
namely, that sending a generator of C4 to the map a 7! a2 . Then G D C3 Ì C4 is a
noncommutative group of order 12, not isomorphic to A4 . If we denote the generators of C3
and C4 by a and b, then a and b generate G, and have the defining relations
a3 D 1; b 4 D 1; bab 1
D a2 :
3.15 Groups of order p 3 (no element of order p 2 ). Let N D ha; bi be the product of
two cyclic groups hai and hbi of order p, and let Q D hci be a cyclic group of order p.
Define W Q ! Aut.N / to be the homomorphism such that
(If we regard N as the additive group N D Fp2 with a and b the standard basis elements, then
1 0 def
.c i / is the automorphism of N defined by the matrix .) The group G D N Ì Q is
i 1
a group of order p 3 , with generators a; b; c and defining relations
ap D b p D c p D 1; ab D cac 1
; Œb; a D 1 D Œb; c:
Because b ¤ 1, the middle equality shows that the group is not commutative. When p is
odd, all elements except 1 have order p. When p D 2, G D4 , which does have an element
of order 22 : Note that this shows that a group can have quite different representations as a
semidirect product:
.3.9a)
D4 C4 Ì C2 .C2 C2 / Ì C2 :
Semidirect products 49
0 .q/ D ˛ ı .q/ ı ˛ 1
; all q 2 Q;
and
is an isomorphism.
P ROOF. Routine verification. 2
50 3. AUTOMORPHISMS AND E XTENSIONS
L EMMA 3.19 If Q is cyclic and the subgroup .Q/ of Aut.N / is conjugate to 0 .Q/, then
N Ì Q N Ì 0 Q:
P ROOF. Let a generate Q. By assumption, there exists an a0 2 Q and an ˛ 2 Aut.N / such
that
0 .a0 / D ˛ .a/ ˛ 1 :
The element 0 .a0 / generates 0 .Q/, and so we can choose a0 to generate Q, say a0 D ai with
i relatively prime to the order of Q. Now the map .n; q/ 7! .˛.n/; q i / is an isomorphism
N Ì Q ! N Ì 0 Q. 2
S UMMARY 3.20 Let G be a group with subgroups H1 and H2 such that G D H1 H2 and
H1 \ H2 D feg, so that each element g of G can be written uniquely as g D h1 h2 with
h1 2 H1 and h2 2 H2 .
(a) If H1 and H2 are both normal, then G is the direct product of H1 and H2 , G D
H1 H2 (1.51).
(b) If H1 is normal in G, then G is the semidirect product of H1 and H2 , G D H1 Ì H2
((15), p. 46).
(c) If neither H1 nor H2 is normal, then G is the Zappa-Szép (or knit) product of H1 and
H2 (see wikipedia).
Extensions of groups
A sequence of groups and homomorphisms
1!N !G!Q!1 (16)
is exact if is injective, is surjective, and Ker./ D Im./. Thus .N / is a normal subgroup
'
of G (isomorphic by to N / and G=.N / ! Q. We often identify N with the subgroup
.N / of G and Q with the quotient G=N:
An exact sequence (16) is also called an extension of Q by N .1 An extension is central
if .N / Z.G/. For example, a semidirect product N Ì Q gives rise to an extension of Q
by N ,
1 ! N ! N Ì Q ! Q ! 1;
which is central if and only if is the trivial homomorphism.
Two extensions of Q by N are said to be isomorphic if there exists a commutative
diagram
1 N G Q 1
1 N G0 Q 1:
An extension of Q by N ,
1 ! N ! G ! Q ! 1;
is said to be split if it is isomorphic to the extension defined by a semidirect product N Ì Q.
Equivalent conditions:
1 This is Bourbaki’s terminology (Algèbre, I 6); some authors call (16) an extension of N by Q.
Extensions of groups 51
1 ! Cp ! Cp2 ! Cp ! 1
1 ! N ! Q ! Q=N ! 1 (17)
doesn’t split (if it did, Q would be commutative because N and Q=N are commutative and
is trivial).
P ROPOSITION 3.22 An extension (16) splits if N is complete. In fact, G is then the direct
product of N with the centralizer of N in G,
def
CG .N / D fg 2 G j gn D ng all n 2 N g.
P ROOF. Let H D CG .N /. We shall check that N and H satisfy the conditions of Proposi-
tion 1.51.
Observe first that, for any g 2 G, n 7! gng 1 W N ! N is an automorphism of N , and
(because N is complete), it must be the inner automorphism defined by an element
of N ;
thus
gng 1 D
n
1 all n 2 N .
This equation shows that
1 g 2 H , and hence g D
.
1 g/ 2 NH . Since g was arbitrary,
we have shown that G D NH .
Next note that every element of N \ H is in the centre of N , which (because N is
complete) is trivial; hence N \ H D 1.
Finally, for any element g D nh 2 G,
1 1 1 1
gHg D n.hH h /n D nH n DH
(recall that every element of N commutes with every element of H ). Therefore H is normal
in G. 2
An extension
1!N !G!Q!1
gives rise to a homomorphism 0 W G ! Aut.N /, namely,
0 .g/.n/ D gng 1
:
This map depends only on the isomorphism class of the extension, and we write Ext1 .Q; N /
for the set of isomorphism classes of extensions with a given : These sets have been exten-
sively studied.
When Q and N are commutative, there is a commutative group structure on the
set Ext1 .Q; N / . Moreover, endomorphisms of Q and N act as endomorphisms on
Ext1 .Q; N / . In particular, multiplication by m on Q or N induces multiplication by
m on Ext1 .Q; N / . Thus, if Q and N are killed by m and n respectively, then Ext1 .Q; N /
is killed by m and by n, and hence by gcd.m; n/. This proves the Schur-Zassenhaus theorem
in this case.
Here q D p n , p prime, and Fq is “the” field with q elements. This group is not simple
if q ¤ 2, because the scalar matrices diag.; : : : ; /, m D 1, are in the centre for any m
dividing q 1, but these are the only matrices in the centre, and the groups
def
PSLn .Fq / D SLn .Fq /=fcentreg
2 It
has been shown that every group on the list can be generated by two elements, and so this is true for all
finite simple groups. If a proof of this could be found that doesn’t use the classification, then the proof of the
classification would be greatly simplified (mo59213).
Exercises 53
are simple when m 3 (Rotman 1995, 8.23) and when m D 2 and q > 3 (ibid. 8.13). Other
finite simple groups can be obtained from the groups in (1.8). The smallest noncommutative
group is A5 , and the second smallest is PSL3 .F2 /, which has order 168 (see Exercise 4-8).
Exercises
3-1 Let G be the quaternion group (1.18). Prove that G can’t be written as a semidirect
product in any nontrivial fashion.
3-2 Let G be a group of order mn where m and n have no common factor. If G contains
exactly one subgroup M of order m and exactly one subgroup N of order n, prove that G is
the direct product of M and N .
a 0 b
3-5 Let G be the set of all matrices in GL3 .R/ of the form 0 a c , ad ¤ 0. Check that
0 0 d
G is a subgroup of GL3 .R/, and prove that it is a semidirect product of R2 (additive group)
by R R . Is it a direct product of these two groups?
3-7 Let G D N Ì Q where N and Q are finite groups, and let g D nq be an element of G
with n 2 N and q 2 Q. Denote the order of an element x by o.x/:
(a) Show that o.g/ D k o.q/ for some divisor k of jN j.
(b) When Q acts trivially on N , show that o.g/ D lcm.o.n/; o.q//:
(c) Let G D S5 D A5 Ì Q with Q D h.1; 2/i. Let n D .1; 4; 3; 2; 5/ and let q D .1; 2/.
Show that o.g/ D 6, o.n/ D 5, and o.q/ D 2.
(d) Suppose that G D .Cp /p Ì Q where Q is cyclic of order p and that, for some
generator q of Q,
q.a1 ; : : : ; an /q 1 D .an ; a1 ; : : : ; an 1 /:
Show inductively that, for i p,
(i copies of 1). Deduce that ..1; 0; : : : ; 0/; q/ has order p 2 (hence o.g/ D o.n/ o.q/ in this
case).
(e) Suppose that G D N Ì Q where N is commutative, Q is cyclic of order 2, and the
generator q of Q acts on N by sending each element to its inverse. Show that .n; 1/ has
order 2 no matter what n is (in particular, o.g/ is independent of o.n/).
f g
A B C 0
a b c
d
0 A0 B0 C0
f0 g0
.n; h/ 7! nhW N Ì H ! G
3-11 Let N and Q be subgroups of a group G. Show that G is the semidirect product of
N and Q if and only if there exists a homomorphism G ! Q whose restriction to Q is the
identity map and whose kernel is N .
C HAPTER 4
Groups Acting on Sets
gL W X ! X; x 7! gx;
gx D x for all x 2 X H) g D 1:
E XAMPLE 4.2 (a) Every subgroup of the symmetric group Sn acts faithfully on f1; 2; :::; ng.
(b) Every subgroup H of a group G acts faithfully on G by left translation,
H G ! G; .h; x/ 7! hx:
(c) Let H be a subgroup of G. The group G acts on the set of left cosets of H ,
57
58 4. G ROUPS ACTING ON S ETS
A right action X G ! G is defined similarly. To turn a right action into a left action,
set g x D xg 1 . For example, there is a natural right action of G on the set of right
cosets of a subgroup H in G, namely, .C; g/ 7! Cg, which can be turned into a left action
.g; C / 7! Cg 1 .
A map of G-sets (alternatively, a G-map or a G-equivariant map) is a map 'W X ! Y
such that
'.gx/ D g'.x/; all g 2 G; x 2 X:
An isomorphism of G-sets is a bijective G-map; its inverse is then also a G-map.
O RBITS
Let G act on X. A subset S X is said to be stable under the action of G if
g 2 G; x 2 S H) gx 2 S:
It is therefore an equivalence relation. The equivalence classes are called G-orbits. Thus the
G-orbits partition X . Write GnX for the set of orbits.
By definition, the G-orbit containing x0 is
E XAMPLE 4.3 (a) Suppose G acts on X , and let ˛ 2 G be an element of order n. Then the
orbits of h˛i are the sets of the form
fx0 ; ˛x0 ; : : : ; ˛ n 1
x0 g:
(These elements need not be distinct, and so the set may contain fewer than n elements.)
(b) The orbits for a subgroup H of G acting on G by left multiplication are the right
cosets of H in G. We write H nG for the set of right cosets. Similarly, the orbits for H
acting by right multiplication are the left cosets, and we write G=H for the set of left cosets.
Note that the group law on G will not induce a group law on G=H unless H is normal.
(c) For a group G acting on itself by conjugation, the orbits are called conjugacy classes:
for x 2 G, the conjugacy class of x is the set
1
fgxg j g 2 Gg
Definition and examples 59
Note that a subset of X is stable if and only if it is a union of orbits. For example, a
subgroup H of G is normal if and only if it is a union of conjugacy classes.
The action of G on X is said to be transitive, and G is said to act transitively on X, if
there is only one orbit, i.e., for any two elements x and y of X , there exists a g 2 G such that
gx D y. The set X is then called a homogeneous G-set. For example, Sn acts transitively
on f1; 2; :::; ng. For any subgroup H of a group G, G acts transitively on G=H , but the
action of G on itself is never transitive if G ¤ 1 because f1g is always a conjugacy class.
The action of G on X is doubly transitive if for any two pairs .x1 ; x2 /, .y1 ; y2 / of
elements of X with x1 ¤ x2 and y1 ¤ y2 , there exists a (single) g 2 G such that gx1 D y1
and gx2 D y2 . Define k-fold transitivity for k 3 similarly.
S TABILIZERS
Let G act on X. The stabilizer (or isotropy group) of an element x 2 X is
Stab.x/ D fg 2 G j gx D xg:
It is a subgroup, but it need not be a normal subgroup (see the next lemma). The action is
free if Stab.x/ D feg for all x.
L EMMA 4.4 For any g 2 G and x 2 X,
1
Stab.gx/ D g Stab.x/ g :
P ROOF. Certainly, if g0 x D x, then
.gg 0 g 1
/gx D gg 0 x D gx D y;
and so g Stab.x/ g 1 Stab.gx/. Conversely, if g 0 .gx/ D gx, then
1 0 1 0 1
.g g g/x D g g .gx/ D g y D x;
and so g 1 g0 g 2 Stab.x/, i.e., g 0 2 g Stab.x/ g 1.
2
Clearly \
Stab.x/ D Ker.G ! Sym.X //;
x2X
T
which is a normal subgroup of G. The action is faithful if and only if Stab.x/ D f1g.
E XAMPLE 4.5 (a) Let G act on itself by conjugation. Then
Stab.x/ D fg 2 G j gx D xgg:
This group is called the centralizer CG .x/ of x in G. It consists of all elements of G that
commute with, i.e., centralize, x. The intersection
\
CG .x/ D fg 2 G j gx D xg for all x 2 Gg
x2G
60 4. G ROUPS ACTING ON S ETS
is the centre of G.
(b) Let G act on G=H by left multiplication. Then Stab.H / D H , and the stabilizer of
gH is gHg 1 :
(c) Let G be the group of rigid motions of Rn (4.2f). The stabilizer of the origin is the
orthogonal group On for the standard positive definite form on Rn (Artin 1991, Chap. 4,
5.16). Let T ' .Rn ; C/ be the subgroup of G of translations of Rn , i.e., maps of the form
v 7! v C v0 some v0 2 Rn . Then T is a normal subgroup of G and G ' T Ì O (cf. Artin
1991, Chap. 5, 2).
Stab.S / D fg 2 G j gS D S g:
Then Stab.S / is a subgroup of G, and the same argument as in the proof of (4.4) shows that
1
Stab.gS / D g Stab.S / g :
E XAMPLE 4.6 Let G act on G by conjugation, and let H be a subgroup of G. The stabilizer
of H is called the normalizer NG .H / of H in G:
1
NG .H / D fg 2 G j gHg D H g:
T RANSITIVE ACTIONS
P ROPOSITION 4.7 If G acts transitively on X, then for any x0 2 X, the map
is an isomorphism of G-sets.
P ROOF. It is well-defined because, if h 2 Stab.x0 /, then ghx0 D gx0 . It is injective because
gx0 D g 0 x0 H) g 1 0
g x0 D x0 H) g; g 0 lie in the same left coset of Stab.x0 /:
C OROLLARY 4.8 Let G act on X, and let O D Gx0 be the orbit containing x0 . Then the
cardinality of O is
jOj D .G W Stab.x0 //: (19)
For example, the number of conjugates gHg 1 of a subgroup H of G is .GW NG .H //.
Definition and examples 61
Ker.G ! Sym.X //
L EMMA 4.10 For any subgroup H of a group G, g2G gHg 1 is the largest normal
T
subgroup contained in H .
def T
P ROOF. Note that N0 D g2G gHg 1 , being an intersection of subgroups, is itself a
subgroup. It is normal because
\
g1 N0 g1 1 D .g1 g/N0 .g1 g/ 1 D N0
g2G
— for the second equality, we used that, as g runs over the elements of G, so also does g1 g.
Thus N0 is a normal subgroup of G contained in eHe 1 D H . If N is a second such group,
then
N D gNg 1 gHg 1
for all g 2 G, and so \
1
N gHg D N0 :
g2G 2
T HE CLASS EQUATION
When X is finite, it is a disjoint union of a finite number of orbits:
m
[
XD Oi (disjoint union):
i D1
Hence:
.y runs over set of representatives for the conjugacy classes containing more than one
element).
T HEOREM 4.13 (C AUCHY ) If the prime p divides jGj, then G contains an element of order
p.
P ROOF. We use induction on jGj. If for some y not in the centre of G, p does not divide .G W
CG .y//, then p divides the order of CG .y/ and we can apply induction to find an element
of order p in CG .y/. Thus we may suppose that p divides all of the terms .G W CG .y// in
the class equation (second form), and so also divides Z.G/. But Z.G/ is commutative, and
it follows from the structure theorem1 of such groups that Z.G/ will contain an element of
order p. 2
C OROLLARY 4.14 A finite group G is a p-group if and only if every element has order a
power of p.
P ROOF. If jGj is a power of p, then Lagrange’s theorem (1.26) shows that the order of every
element is a power of p. The converse follows from Cauchy’s theorem. 2
C OROLLARY 4.15 Every group of order 2p, p an odd prime, is cyclic or dihedral.
P ROOF. From Cauchy’s theorem, we know that such a G contains elements s and r of orders
2 and p respectively. Let H D hri. Then H is of index 2, and so is normal. Obviously
s … H , and so G D H [ H s W
G D f1; r; : : : ; r p 1
; s; rs; : : : ; r p 1
sg:
2
As H is normal, srs 1 D r i , some i . Because s 2 D 1, r D s 2 rs 2 D s.srs 1 /s 1 D r i ,
and so i 2 1 mod p. Because Z=pZ is a field, its only elements with square 1 are ˙1, and
so i 1 or 1 mod p. In the first case, the group is commutative (any group generated by a
set of commuting elements is obviously commutative); in the second srs 1 D r 1 and we
have the dihedral group (2.9). 2
1 Here is a direct proof that the theorem holds for an abelian group Z. We use induction on the order of Z.
It suffices to show that Z contains an element whose order is divisible by p; because then some power of the
element will have order exactly p. Let g ¤ 1 be an element of Z. If p doesn’t divide the order of g, then it
divides the order of Z=hgi, in which case there exists (by induction) an element of G whose order in Z=hgi is
divisible by p. But the order of such an element must itself be divisible by p.
Definition and examples 63
p- GROUPS
T HEOREM 4.16 Every nontrivial finite p-group has nontrivial centre.
P ROOF. By assumption, .G W 1/ is a power of p, and so .G W CG .y// is power of p (¤ p 0 )
for all y not in the centre of G. As p divides every term in the class equation (22) except
(perhaps) jZ.G/j, it must divide jZ.G/j also. 2
C OROLLARY 4.17 A group of order p n has normal subgroups of order p m for all m n.
P ROOF. We use induction on n. The centre of G contains an element g of order p, and so
N D hgi is a normal subgroup of G of order p. Now the induction hypothesis allows us to
assume the result for G=N; and the correspondence theorem (1.47) then gives it to us for
G: 2
L EMMA 4.19 Suppose G contains a subgroup H in its centre (hence H is normal) such
that G=H is cyclic. Then G is commutative.
P ROOF. Let a be an element of G whose image in G=H generates it. Then every element
of G can be written g D ai h with h 2 H , i 2 Z. Now
0 0
a i h a i h0 D ai ai hh0 because H Z.G/
0
D ai ai h0 h
0
D ai h0 ai h: 2
R EMARK 4.20 The above proof shows that if H Z.G/ and G contains a set of represen-
tatives for G=H whose elements commute, then G is commutative.
For p odd, it is now not difficult to show that any noncommutative group of order p 3 is
isomorphic to exactly one of the groups constructed in (3.14, 3.15) (Exercise 4-4). Thus, up
to isomorphism, there are exactly two noncommutative groups of order p 3 .
R EMARK 4.22 (a) Let H be a subgroup of G not containing a normal subgroup of G other
than 1. Then G ! Sym.G=H / is injective, and we have realized G as a subgroup of a
symmetric group of order much smaller than .G W 1/Š. For example, if G is simple, then the
Sylow theorems (see Chapter 5) show that G has many proper subgroups H ¤ 1 (unless G
is cyclic), but (by definition) it has no such normal subgroup.
(b) If .G W 1/ does not divide .G W H /Š, then
G ! Sym.G=H /
can’t be injective (Lagrange’s theorem, 1.26), and we can conclude that H contains a normal
subgroup ¤ 1 of G. For example, if G has order 99, then it will have a subgroup N of order
11 (Cauchy’s theorem, 4.13), and the subgroup must be normal. In fact, G D N Q.
E XAMPLE 4.23 Corollary 4.15 shows that every group G of order 6 is either cyclic or
dihedral. Here we present a slightly different argument. According to Cauchy’s theorem
(4.13), G must contain an element r of order 3 and an element s of order 2. Moreover
def
N D hri must be normal because 6 doesn’t divide 2Š (or simply because it has index 2).
Let H D hsi. Either (a) H is normal in G, or (b) H is not normal in G. In the first
case, rsr 1 D s, i.e., rs D sr, and so G ' hri hsi C2 C3 . In the second case,
G ! Sym.G=H / is injective, hence surjective, and so G S3 D3 .
Permutation groups
Consider Sym.X / where X has n elements. Since (up to isomorphism) a symmetry group
Sym.X / depends only on the number of elements in X, we may take X D f1; 2; : : : ; ng, and
so work with Sn . The symbol 12 25 37 44 53 61 76 denotes the permutation sending 1 7! 2, 2 7! 5,
3 7! 7, etc..
Consider a permutation
1 2 3 ::: n
D :
.1/ .2/ .3/ : : : .n/
The pairs .i; j / with i < j and .i/ > .j / are called the inversions of , and is said
to be even or odd according as the number its inversions is even or odd.. The signature,
sign. /, of is C1 or 1 according as is even or odd. For example, sign. / D 1 if is
a transposition.
Permutation groups 65
R EMARK 4.24 To compute the signature of , connect (by a line) each element i in the top
row to the element i in the bottom row, and count the number of times that the lines cross:
is even or odd according as this number is even or odd. For example,
1 2 3 4 5
3 5 1 4 2
is even (6 intersections). This works, because there is one crossing for each inversion.
R EMARK 4.25 Clearly sign is the unique homomorphism Sn ! f˙1g such that sign. / D
1 for every transposition . Now let G D Sym.X / where X is a set with n elements. Once
we have chosen an ordering of X, we can speak of the inversions of an element of G.
Define ". / to be C1 or 1 according as has an even or an odd number of inversions. The
same arguments as above show that " is the unique homomorphism G ! f˙1g such that
"./ D 1 for every transposition . In particular, it is independent of the choice of the
ordering. In other words, the parity of the number of inversions of is independent of the
choice of the ordering on X . Can you prove this directly?
i1 7! i2 7! i3 7! 7! ir 7! i1 ; remaining i ’s fixed.
The ij are required to be distinct. We denote this cycle by .i1 i2 :::ir /, and call r its length
— note that r is also its order as an element of Sn . A cycle of length 2 is a transposition.
A cycle .i / of length 1 is the identity map. The support of the cycle .i1 : : : ir / is the set
fi1 ; : : : ; ir g, and cycles are said to be disjoint if their supports are disjoint. Note that disjoint
cycles commute. If
then
m D .i1 :::ir /m .j1 :::js /m .l1 :::lu /m (disjoint cycles);
and it follows that has order lcm.r; s; :::; u/:
P ROPOSITION 4.26 Every permutation can be written (in essentially one way) as a product
of disjoint cycles.
P ROOF. Let 2 Sn , and let O f1; 2; : : : ; ng be an orbit for h i. If jOj D r, then for any
i 2 O;
O D fi; .i /; : : : ; r 1 .i /g:
Therefore and the cycle .i .i / : : : r 1 .i // have the same action on any element of O.
Let
m
[
f1; 2; : : : ; ng D Oj
j D1
be the decomposition of f1; : : : ; ng into a disjoint union of orbits for h i, and let
j be the
cycle associated (as above) with Oj . Then
D 1 m
is a decomposition of into a product of disjoint cycles. For the uniqueness, note that
a decomposition D
1
m into a product of disjoint cycles must correspond to a de-
composition of f1; :::; ng into orbits (ignoring cycles of length 1 and orbits with only one
element). We can drop cycles of length one, change the order of the cycles, and change how
we write each cycle (by choosing different initial elements), but that’s all because the orbits
are intrinsically attached to : 2
Permutation groups 67
For example,
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
D .15/.27634/.8/: (24)
5 7 4 2 1 3 6 8
and so the first statement follows from the proposition. Because sign is a homomorphism,
and the signature of a transposition is 1, sign. / D . 1/#transpositions . 2
Note that the formula in the proof shows that the signature of a cycle of length r is
. 1/r 1 , that is, an r-cycle is even or odd according as r is odd or even.
It is possible to define a permutation to be even or odd according as it is a product of an
even or odd number of transpositions, but then one has to go through an argument as above
to show that this is a well-defined notion.
The corollary says that Sn is generated by transpositions. For An there is the following
result.
3-cycles:
8
<.ij /.j l/ D .ij l/
ˆ case j D k;
.ij /.kl/ D .ij /.j k/.j k/.kl/ D .ij k/.j kl/ case i; j; k; l distinct,
ˆ
1 case .ij / D .kl/:
:
2
Recall that two elements a and b of a group G are said to be conjugate a b if there
exists an element g 2 G such that b D gag 1 , and that conjugacy is an equivalence relation.
For a group G, it is useful to determine the conjugacy classes in G.
Hence g.i1 : : : ir / .l1 : : : lu /g 1 D .g.i1 / : : : g.ir // .g.l1 /:::g.lu // (even if the cycles are
not disjoint, because conjugation is a homomorphism). In other words, to obtain gg 1 ,
replace each element in each cycle of by its image under g:
1 n1 n2 nk n and
n1 C n2 C C nk D n:
68 4. G ROUPS ACTING ON S ETS
4 D 1 C 1 C 1 C 1; 4 D 1 C 1 C 2; 4 D 1 C 3; 4 D 2 C 2; 4 D 4;
n D n1 C n2 C ::: C nk ; ni D jOi j;
provided the numbering has been chosen so that jOi j jOi C1 j. Since the orbits of an
element of Sn form a partition of f1; : : : ; ng, we can attach to each such a partition of n.
For example, the partition of 8 attached to .15/.27634/.8/ is 1; 2; 5 and the partition attached
to n attached to
k times. Similarly, it is possible to compute the number of elements in any conjugacy class
in Sn , but a little care is needed when the partition of n has several terms equal. For example,
the number of permutations in S4 of type .ab/.cd / is
1 43 21
D 3:
2 2 2
Permutation groups 69
The 12 is needed so that we don’t count .ab/.cd / D .cd /.ab/ twice. For S4 we have the
following table:
Partition Element No. in Conj. Class Parity
1C1C1C1 1 1 even
1C1C2 .ab/ 6 odd
1C3 .abc/ 8 even
2C2 .ab/.cd / 3 even
4 .abcd / 6 odd
Note that A4 contains exactly 3 elements of order 2, namely those of type 2 C 2, and that
together with 1 they form a subgroup V . This group is a union of conjugacy classes, and is
therefore a normal subgroup of S4 .
R EMARK 4.34 For n D 2, An is trivial, and for n D 3, An is cyclic of order 3, and hence
simple; for n D 4 it is nonabelian and nonsimple — it contains the normal, even characteristic,
subgroup V (see 4.32).
A SIDE 4.38 There exists a description of the conjugacy classes in An , from which it is possible to
deduce its simplicity for n 5 (see Exercise 4-12).
G D G0 G1 Gi 1 Gi Gr D f1g
such that each Gi is normal in Gi 1 and each quotient Gi 1 =Gi is commutative. Thus An (also Sn /
is not solvable if n 5. Let f .X / 2 QŒX be of degree n.
In Galois theory, one attaches to f a subgroup Gf of the group of permutations of the roots of f ,
and shows that the roots of f can be obtained from the coefficients of f by the algebraic operations
of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and the extraction of mth roots if and only if Gf is
solvable (Galois’s theorem). For every n, there exist lots of polynomials f of degree n with Gf Sn ,
and hence (when n 5) lots of polynomials not solvable in radicals.
What is b1? We don’t know, and so it is prudent to introduce another coset 4 D b1. Now
b4 D 1 because b 2 D 1, and so we have
b b
1 7! 4 7! 1:
We still have the relation cba. We know a1 D 2, but we don’t know what b2 is, and so we
set b2 D 5:
a b
1 7! 2 7! 5:
By (iii) c1 D 1, and by (ii) applied to cba we have c5 D 1. Therefore, according to (i) we
must have 5 D 1; we drop 5, and so now b2 D 1. Since b4 D 1 we must have 4 D 2, and so
we can drop 4 also. What we know can be summarized by the table:
a a a b b c c a b c
1 2 3 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1
2 3 1 2 1 2 2 3 2
3 1 2 3 3 3 1 2 3
The bottom right corner, which is forced by (ii), tells us that c2 D 3. Hence also c3 D 2, and
this then determines the rest of the table:
a a a b b c c a b c
1 2 3 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1
2 3 1 2 1 2 3 2 3 3 2
3 1 2 3 3 3 2 3 1 2 3
We find that we have three cosets on which a; b; c act as
a D .123/ b D .12/ c D .23/:
More precisely, we have written down a map G ! S3 that is consistent with the above rules.
A theorem (Artin 1991, 9.10) now says that this does in fact describe the action of G on
G=H . Since the three elements .123/, .12/, and .23/ generate S3 , this shows that the action
of G on G=H induces an isomorphism G ! S3 , and that H is a subgroup of order 2.
In Artin 1991, 6.9, it is explained how to make this procedure into an algorithm which,
when it succeeds in producing a consistent table, will in fact produce the correct table.
This algorithm is implemented in GAP.
Primitive actions.
Let G be a group acting on a set X, and let be a partition of X . We say that is stabilized
by G if
A 2 H) gA 2 :
It suffices to check the condition for a set of generators for G.
E XAMPLE 4.40 (a) The subgroup G D h.1234/i of S4 stabilizes the partition ff1; 3g; f2; 4gg
of f1; 2; 3; 4g.
(b) Identify X D f1; 2; 3; 4g with the set of vertices of the square on which D4 acts
in the usual way, namely, with r D .1234/, s D .2; 4/. Then D4 stabilizes the partition
ff1; 3g; f2; 4gg (opposite vertices stay opposite).
(c) Let X be the set of partitions of f1; 2; 3; 4g into two sets, each with two elements.
Then S4 acts on X , and Ker.S4 ! Sym.X // is the subgroup V defined in (4.32).
72 4. G ROUPS ACTING ON S ETS
The group G always stabilizes the trivial partitions of X, namely, the set of all one-
element subsets of X, and fXg. When it stabilizes only those partitions, we say that the
action is primitive; otherwise it is imprimitive. A subgroup of Sym.X / (e.g., of Sn ) is said
to be primitive if it acts primitively on X. Obviously, Sn itself is primitive, but Example
4.40b shows that D4 , regarded as a subgroup of S4 in the obvious way, is not primitive.
E XAMPLE 4.41 A doubly transitive action is primitive: if it stabilized
ffx; x 0 ; :::g; fy; :::g:::g,
then there would be no element sending .x; x 0 / to .x; y/.
R EMARK 4.42 The G-orbits form a partition of X that is stabilized by G. If the action is
primitive, then the partition into orbits must be one of the trivial ones. Hence
action primitive H) action transitive or trivial.
For the remainder of this section, G is a finite group acting transitively on a set X with at
least two elements.
P ROPOSITION 4.43 The group G acts imprimitively if and only if there is a proper subset
A of X with at least 2 elements such that,
for each g 2 G, either gA D A or gA \ A D ;: (25)
P ROOF. H): The partition stabilized by G contains such an A.
(H: From such an A, we can form a partition fA; g1 A; g2 A; :::g of X , which is stabilized
by G. 2
T HEOREM 4.45 The group G acts primitively on X if and only if, for one (hence all) x in
X, Stab.x/ is a maximal subgroup of G.
P ROOF. If G does not act primitively on X, then (see 4.43) there is a block A ¤ X with at
least two elements, and so (4.44) shows that Stab.x/ will not be maximal for any x 2 A.
Conversely, suppose that there exists an x in X and a subgroup H such that
Stab.x/ ¤ H ¤ G.
Then I claim that A D H x is a block ¤ X with at least two elements.
Because H ¤ Stab.x/, H x ¤ fxg, and so fxg ¤ A ¤ X.
If g 2 H , then gA D A. If g … H , then gA is disjoint from A: for suppose ghx D h0 x
some h0 2 H ; then h0 1 gh 2 Stab.x/ H , say h0 1 gh D h00 , and g D h0 h00 h 1 2 H . 2
Exercises 73
Exercises
4-1 Let H1 and H2 be subgroups of a group G. Show that the maps of G-sets G=H1 !
G=H2 are in natural one-to-one correspondence with the elements gH2 of G=H2 such that
H1 gH2 g 1 .
4-2 (a) Show that a finite group G can’t be equal to the union of the conjugates of a proper
subgroup H .
(b) Show that (a) holds for an infinite group G provided that .GW H / is finite.
(c) Give an example to show that (a) fails in general for infinite groups. S
(d) Give an example of a proper subset S of a finite group G such that G D g2G gSg 1 .
4-3 Show that any set of representatives for the conjugacy classes in a finite group generates
the group.
4-4 Prove that any noncommutative group of order p 3 , p an odd prime, is isomorphic to
one of the two groups constructed in (3.14, 3.15).
4-5 Let p be the smallest prime dividing .G W 1/ (assumed finite). Show that any subgroup
of G of index p is normal.
4-6 Show that a group of order 2m, m odd, contains a subgroup of index 2. (Hint: Use
Cayley’s theorem 1.22)
4-10 Show that Sn is generated by .1 2/; .1 3/; : : : ; .1 n/; also by .1 2/; .2 3/; : : : ; .n 1 n/.
4-12 (a) Let 2 An . From Exercise 4-11 we know that the conjugacy class of in Sn
either remains a single conjugacy class in An or breaks up as a union of two classes of equal
size. Show that the second case occurs ” does not commute with an odd permutation
” the partition of n defined by consists of distinct odd integers.
(b) For each conjugacy class K in A7 , give a member of K, and determine jKj.
4-13 Let G be the group with generators a; b and relations a4 D 1 D b 2 , aba D bab.
(a) Use the Todd-Coxeter algorithm (with H D 1) to find the image of G under the
homomorphism G ! Sn , n D .G W 1/, given by Cayley’s Theorem 1.11. [No need to
include every step; just an outline will do.]
(b) Use Sage/GAP to check your answer.
4-14 Show that if the action of G on X is primitive and effective, then the action of any
normal subgroup H ¤ 1 of G is transitive.
4-15 (a) Check that A4 has 8 elements of order 3, and 3 elements of order 2. Hence it has
no element of order 6.
(b) Prove that A4 has no subgroup of order 6 (cf. 1.30). (Use 4.23.)
(c) Prove that A4 is the only subgroup of S4 of order 12.
4-19 The normal subgroups N of a group G are those with the following property: for
every set X on which G acts transitively, N fixes one x in X if and only if N fixes every x
in X .
4-20 (This exercise assumes a knowledge of categories.) Let G be a group, and let F
be the functor sending a G-set to its underlying set. We can regard G as a G-set, and so
an automorphism a of F defines an automorphism aG of G (as a set). Show that the map
a 7! aG .1/W Aut.F / ! G is an isomorphism of groups (cf. sx66588).
C HAPTER 5
The Sylow Theorems; Applications
H= Stab.x0 / ! OI
75
76 5. T HE S YLOW T HEOREMS ; A PPLICATIONS
L EMMA 5.1 Let H be a p-group acting on a finite set X, and let X H be the set of points
fixed by H ; then
jXj jX H j .mod p/:
When the lemma is applied to a p-group H acting on itself by conjugation, we find that
.Z.H / W 1/ .H W 1/ mod p
T HEOREM 5.2 (S YLOW I) Let G be a finite group, and let p be prime. If p r j.G W 1/, then
G has a subgroup of order p r :
P ROOF. According to (4.17), it suffices to prove this with p r the highest power of p dividing
.G W 1/, and so from now on we assume that .G W 1/ D p r m with m not divisible by p. Let
Note that, because i < p r , the power of p dividing p r m i is the power of p dividing i . The
same is true for p r i . Therefore the corresponding terms on top and bottom are divisible
by the same powers of p, and so p does not divide jXj. Because the orbits form a partition
of X , X
jX j D jOi j; Oi the distinct orbits;
and so at least one of the jOi j is not divisible by p. 2
E XAMPLE 5.3 Let Fp D Z=pZ, the field with p elements, and let G D GLn .Fp /. The n n
matrices in G are precisely those whose columns form a basis for Fpn . Thus, the first column
can be any nonzero vector in Fpn , of which there are p n 1; the second column can be any
vector not in the span of the first column, of which there are p n p; and so on. Therefore,
the order of G is
.p n 1/.p n p/.p n p 2 / .p n p n 1 /;
The Sylow theorems 77
R EMARK 5.4 The theorem gives another proof of Cauchy’s theorem (4.13). If a prime p
divides .GW 1/, then G will have a subgroup H of order p, and any g 2 H , g ¤ 1, is an
element of G of order p.
R EMARK 5.5 The proof of Theorem 5.2 can be modified to show directly that for each
power p r of p dividing .G W 1/ there is a subgroup H of G of order p r . One again writes
.G W 1/ D p r m and considers the set X of all subsets of order p r . In this case, the highest
power p r0 of p dividing jXj is the highest power of p dividing m, and it follows that there
is an orbit in X whose order is not divisible by p r0 C1 . For an A in such an orbit, the same
counting argument shows that Stab.A/ has p r elements. We recommend that the reader
write out the details.
T HEOREM 5.6 (S YLOW II) Let G be a finite group, and let jGj D p r m with m not divisible
by p.
(a) Any two Sylow p-subgroups are conjugate.
(b) Let sp be the number of Sylow p-subgroups in G; then sp 1 mod p and sp jm.
(c) Every p-subgroup of G is contained in a Sylow p-subgroup.
and .P W 1/ is the largest power of p dividing .G W 1/, hence also the largest power of p
dividing .HP W 1/. Thus .HP W P / D p 0 D 1, and H P . 2
78 5. T HE S YLOW T HEOREMS ; A PPLICATIONS
P ROOF ( OF S YLOW II) (a) Let X be the set of Sylow p-subgroups in G, and let G act on
X by conjugation,
.g; P / 7! gP g 1 W G X ! X:
Let O be one of the G-orbits: we have to show O is all of X.
Let P 2 O, and let P act on O through the action of G. This single G-orbit may break
up into several P -orbits, one of which will be fP g. In fact this is the only one-point orbit
because
fQg is a P -orbit ” P normalizes Q;
which we know (5.7) happens only for Q D P . Hence the number of elements in every
P -orbit other than fP g is divisible by p, and we have that jOj 1 mod p.
Suppose there exists a P … O. We again let P act on O, but this time the argument
shows that there are no one-point orbits, and so the number of elements in every P -orbit is
divisible by p. This implies that #O is divisible by p, which contradicts what we proved in
the last paragraph. There can be no such P , and so O is all of X.
(b) Since sp is now the number of elements in O, we have also shown that sp 1 (mod
p/.
Let P be a Sylow p-subgroup of G. According to (a), sp is the number of conjugates of
P , which equals
.G W 1/ .G W 1/ m
.G W NG .P // D D D :
.NG .P / W 1/ .NG .P / W P / .P W 1/ .NG .P / W P /
This is a factor of m.
(c) Let H be a p-subgroup of G, and let H act on the set X of Sylow p-subgroups by
conjugation. Because jXj D sp is not divisible by p, X H must be nonempty (Lemma 5.1),
i.e., at least one H -orbit consists of a single Sylow p-subgroup. But then H normalizes P
and Lemma 5.7 implies that H P . 2
C OROLLARY 5.8 A Sylow p-subgroup is normal if and only if it is the only Sylow p-
subgroup.
P ROOF. Let P be a Sylow p-subgroup of G. If P is normal, then (a) of Sylow II implies
that it is the only Sylow p-subgroup. The converse statement follows from (3.7c) (which
shows, in fact, that P is even characteristic). 2
C OROLLARY 5.9 Suppose that a group G has only one Sylow p-subgroup for each prime
p dividing its order. Then G is a direct product of its Sylow p-subgroups.
P ROOF. Let P1 ; : : : ; Pk be Sylow subgroups of G, and let jPi j D piri ; the pi are distinct
primes. Because each Pi is normal in G, the product P1 Pk is a normal subgroup of G.
We shall prove by induction on k that it has order p1r1 pkrk . If k D 1, there is nothing to
prove, and so we may suppose that k 2 and that P1 Pk 1 has order p1r1 pkrk 11 . Then
P1 Pk 1 \ Pk D 1; therefore (1.51) shows that .P1 Pk 1 /Pk is the direct product of
P1 Pk 1 and Pk , and so has order p1r1 pkrk . Now (1.52) applied to the full set of Sylow
subgroups of G shows that G is their direct product. 2
Alternative approach to the Sylow theorems 79
E XAMPLE 5.10 Let G D GL.V / where V is a vector space of dimension n over Fp . There
is a geometric description of the Sylow subgroups of G. A maximal flag F in V is a
sequence of subspaces
V D Vn Vn 1 Vi V1 f0g
with dim Vi D i . Given such a flag F , let U.F / be the set of linear maps ˛W V ! V such that
(a) ˛.Vi / Vi for all i , and
(b) the endomorphism of Vi =Vi 1 induced by ˛ is the identity map.
I claim that U.F / is a Sylow p-subgroup of G. Indeed, we can construct a basis fe1 ; : : : ; en g
for V such fe1 g is basis for V1 , fe1 ; e2 g is a basis for V2 , and so on. Relative to this basis,
the matrices of the elements of U.F / are exactly the elements of the group U of (5.3).
def
Let g 2 GLn .F/. Then gF D fgVn ; gVn 1 ; : : :g is again a maximal flag, and U.gF / D
g U.F / g 1 . From (a) of Sylow II, we see that the Sylow p-subgroups of G are precisely
the groups of the form U.F / for some maximal flag F .
A SIDE 5.11 Some books use different numberings for Sylow’s theorems. I have essentially followed
the original (Sylow 1872).
T HEOREM 5.12 Let G be a group, and let P be a Sylow p-subgroup of G. For any subgroup
H of G, there exists an a 2 G such that H \ aP a 1 is a Sylow p-subgroup of H .
P ROOF. Recall (Exercise 4-18) that G is a disjoint union of the double cosets for H and P ,
and so
X X jH jjP j
jGj D jHaP j D
a a jH \ aP a 1 j
where the sum is over a set of representatives for the double cosets. On dividing by jP j we
find that
jGj X jH j
D ;
jP j a jH \ aP a 1 j
Examples
We apply what we have learnt to obtain information about groups of various orders.
5.13 (G ROUPS OF ORDER 99) Let G have order 99. ˇ 99The Sylow theorems imply that G has
at least one subgroup H of order 11, and in fact s11 ˇ 11 and s11 1 mod 11. It follows that
s11 D 1, and H is normal. Similarly, s9 j11 and s9 1 mod 3, and so the Sylow 3-subgroup
is also normal. Hence G is isomorphic to the direct product of its Sylow subgroups (5.9),
which are both commutative (4.18), and so G commutative.
Here is an alternative proof. Verify as before that the Sylow 11-subgroup N of G is
normal. The Sylow 3-subgroup Q maps bijectively onto G=N , and so G D N Ì Q. It
remains to determine the action by conjugation of Q on N . But Aut.N / is cyclic of order
10 (see 3.5), and so there is only the trivial homomorphism Q ! Aut.N /. It follows that G
is the direct product of N and Q.
5.14 (G ROUPS OF ORDER pq, p; q PRIMES , p < q) Let G be such a group, and let P and
Q be Sylow p and q subgroups. Then .G W Q/ D p, which is the smallest prime dividing
.G W 1/, and so (see Exercise 4-5) Q is normal. Because P maps bijectively onto G=Q, we
have that
G D Q Ì P;
and it remains to determine the action of P on Q by conjugation.
The group Aut.Q/ is cyclic of order q 1 (see 3.5), and so, unless pjq 1, G D Q P .
If pjq 1, then Aut.Q/ (being cyclic) has a unique subgroup P 0 of order p. In fact P 0
consists of the maps
x 7! x i ; fi 2 Z=qZ j i p D 1g:
Let a and b be generators for P and Q respectively, and suppose that the action of a on Q
by conjugation is x 7! x i0 ; i0 ¤ 1 (in Z=qZ). Then G has generators a; b and relations
ap ; bq ; aba 1
D b i0 :
Hence s3 D 1 or 10, and s5 D 1 or 6. In fact, at least one is 1, for otherwise there would
be 20 elements of order 3 and 24 elements of order 5, which is impossible. Therefore, a
Sylow 3-subgroup P or a Sylow 5-subgroup Q is normal, and so H D PQ is a subgroup of
G. Because 3 doesn’t divide 5 1 D 4, (5.14) shows that H is commutative, H C3 C5 .
Hence
G D .C3 C5 / Ì C2 ;
Examples 81
and the only elements of Aut C3 and Aut C5 of order 2 are a 7! a 1 and b 7! b 1. Thus
there are exactly 4 homomorphisms , and .c/ is one of the following elements:
a 7! a 1 a 7! a 1
a 7! a a 7! a
:
b 7! b b 7! b 1 b 7! b b 7! b 1
The groups corresponding to these homomorphisms have centres of order 30, 3 (generated
by a), 5 (generated by b), and 1 respectively, and hence are nonisomorphic. We have shown
that (up to isomorphism) there are exactly 4 groups of order 30. For example, the third on
our list has generators a; b; c and relations
5.16 (G ROUPS OF ORDER 12) Let G be a group of order 12, and let P be its Sylow 3-
subgroup. If P is not normal, then P doesn’t contain a nontrivial normal subgroup of G,
and so the map (4.2, action on the left cosets)
' W G ! Sym.G=P / S4
is injective, and its image is a subgroup of S4 of order 12. From Sylow II we see that G
has exactly 4 Sylow 3-subgroups, and hence it has exactly 8 elements of order 3. But all
elements of S4 of order 3 are in A4 (see the table in 4.32), and so '.G/ intersects A4 in a
subgroup with at least 8 elements. By Lagrange’s theorem '.G/ D A4 , and so G A4 .
Now assume that P is normal. Then G D P Ì Q where Q is the Sylow 4-subgroup. If
Q is cyclic of order 4, then there is a unique nontrivial map Q.D C4 / ! Aut.P /.D C2 /,
and hence we obtain a single noncommutative group C3 Ì C4 . If Q D C2 C2 , there are
exactly 3 nontrivial homomorphism W Q ! Aut.P /, but the three groups resulting are all
isomorphic to S3 C2 with C2 D Ker . (The homomorphisms differ by an automorphism
of Q, and so we can also apply Lemma 3.18.)
In total, there are 3 noncommutative groups of order 12 and 2 commutative groups.
5.17 (G ROUPS OF ORDER p 3 ) Let G be a group of order p 3 , with p an odd prime, and
assume G is not commutative. We know from (4.17) that G has a normal subgroup N of
order p 2 .
If every element of G has order p (except 1), then N Cp Cp and there is a subgroup
Q of G of order p such that Q \ N D f1g. Hence
G D N Ì Q
We know Z.G/ ¤ 1, and, because G isn’t commutative, that G=Z.G/ is not cyclic
(4.19). Therefore .Z.G/ W 1/ D p and G=Z.G/ Cp Cp . In particular, we see that for
all x 2 G, x p 2 Z.G/. Because G=Z.G/ is commutative, the commutator of any pair of
elements of G lies in Z.G/, and an easy induction argument shows that
n.n 1/
.xy/n D x n y n Œy; x 2 ; n 1:
Note that groups of order pq r , p; q primes, p < q are not simple, because Exercise 4-5
shows that the Sylow q-subgroup is normal. An examination of cases now reveals that A5 is
the smallest noncyclic simple group.
5.19 (G ROUPS OF ORDER 60) Let G be a simple group of order 60. We shall show that G
is isomorphic to A5 . Let P be a Sylow 2-subgroup and N D NG .P /, so that s2 D .G W N /.
According to the Sylow theorems, s2 D 1; 3; 5; or 15:
(a) The case s2 D 1 is impossible, because P would be normal (see 5.8).
(b) The case s2 D 3 is impossible, because the kernel of G ! Sym.G=N / would be a
nontrivial normal subgroup of G.
(c) In the case s2 D 5, we get an inclusion G ,! Sym.G=N / D S5 , which realizes G as
a subgroup of index 2 in S5 , but we saw in (4.37) that, for n 5, An is the only subgroup of
index 2 in Sn .
(d) In the case s2 D 15, a counting argument (using that s5 D 6) shows that there exist
two Sylow 2-subgroups P and Q intersecting in a group of order 2. The normalizer N
1 Equivalently, the usual map G ! Sym.G=N /.
Exercises 83
of P \ Q contains P and Q, and so it has index 1, 3, or 5 in G. The first two cases are
impossible for the same reasons as in (a) and (b). If .GW N / D 5, the argument in (c) gives
an isomorphism G A5 ; but this is impossible because s2 .A5 / D 5.
Exercises
5-1 Show that a finite group (not necessarily commutative) is cyclic if, for each n > 0, it
contains at most n elements of order dividing n.
C HAPTER 6
Subnormal Series; Solvable and
Nilpotent Groups
Subnormal Series.
Let G be a group. A chain of subgroups
G D G0 G1 Gi Gi C1 Gn D f1g:
G D G0 F G1 F F Gi F Gi C1 F F Gn D f1g
1 ! Gn 1 ! Gn 2 ! Gn 2 =Gn 1 !1
1 ! Gi C1 ! Gi ! Gi =Gi C1 ! 1
1 ! G1 ! G0 ! G0 =G1 ! 1:
85
86 6. S UBNORMAL S ERIES ; S OLVABLE AND N ILPOTENT G ROUPS
as being built up out of simple groups. The Jordan-Hölder theorem, which is the main topic
of this section, says that these simple groups are independent of the composition series (up
to order and isomorphism).
Note that if G has a subnormal series G D G0 F G1 F F Gn D f1g, then
Y Y
.G W 1/ D .Gi 1 W Gi / D .Gi 1 =Gi W 1/:
1i n 1i n
S3 F A3 F 1
with quotients C2 , C3 :
(b) The symmetric group S4 has a composition series
S4 F A4 F V F h.13/.24/i F 1;
where V C2 C2 consists of all elements of order 2 in A4 (see 4.32). The quotients are
C2 , C3 , C2 , C2 .
(c) Any maximal flag in Fpn , p a prime, is a composition series. Its length is n, and its
quotients are Cp ; Cp ; : : : ; Cp :
(d) Consider the cyclic group Cm D hai. For any factorization m D p1 pr of m into a
product of primes (not necessarily distinct), there is a composition series
Cm F C pm F C p mp F
1 1 2
k k k
hai hap1 i hap1 p2 i
G D G0 F G1 F F Gs D f1g
G D H0 F H1 F F H t D f1g
are two composition series for G, then s D t and there is a permutation of f1; 2; : : : ; sg
such that Gi =Gi C1 H .i / =H .i /C1 .
P ROOF. We use induction on the order of G.
Case I: H1 D G1 . In this case, we have two composition series for G1 , to which we can
apply the induction hypothesis.
2 Jordan showed that corresponding quotients had the same order, and Hölder that they were isomorphic.
Subnormal Series. 87
G K2 F F Ku
j
jj
H1 F H2 F F Ht :
On applying the induction hypothesis to G1 and H1 and their composition series in the
diagram, we find that
Quotients.G F G1 F G2 F / D fG=G1 ; G1 =G2 ; G2 =G3 ; : : :g (definition)
fG=G1 ; G1 =K2 ; K2 =K3 ; : : :g (induction)
fH1 =K2 ; G=H1 ; K2 =K3 ; : : :g (apply (26))
fG=H1 ; H1 =K2 ; K2 =K3 ; : : :g (reorder)
fG=H1 ; H1 =H2 ; H2 =H3 ; : : :g (induction)
D Quotients.G F H1 F H2 F / (definition). 2
Note that the theorem applied to a cyclic group Cm implies that the factorization of an
integer into a product of primes is unique.
R EMARK 6.3 (a) There are infinite groups having finite composition series (there are even
infinite simple groups). For such a group, let d.G/ be the minimum length of a composition
series. Then the Jordan-Hölder theorem extends to show that all composition series have
length d.G/ and have isomorphic quotient groups. The same proof works except that you
have to use induction on d.G/ instead of jGj and verify that a normal subgroup of a group
with a finite composition series also has a finite composition series (Exercise 6-1).
(b) Analogues of the Jordan-Hölder theorem hold in many situations, but not in all
situations. Consider, for example, the category of finitely generated projective modules over
a Dedekind domain R. Every such module is isomorphic to a finite direct sum a1 ˚ ˚ ar
of nonzero ideals in R, and two modules a1 ˚ ˚ ar and b1 ˚ ˚ bs are isomorphic if and
only if r D s and a1 ar equals b1 bs in the ideal class group of R. If a is a nonprincipal
ideal in R and b is such that ab is principal, then a ˚ b R2 , and so R2 has composition
series with distinct quotients fa; bg and fR; Rg.
Solvable groups
A subnormal series whose quotient groups are all commutative is called a solvable series.
A group is solvable (or soluble) if it has a solvable series. Alternatively, we can say that a
group is solvable if it can be obtained by forming successive extensions of commutative
groups. Since a commutative group is simple if and only if it is cyclic of prime order, we see
that G is solvable if and only if for one (hence every) composition series the quotients are all
cyclic groups of prime order.
Every commutative group is solvable, as is every dihedral group. The results in Chapter
5 show that every group of order < 60 is solvable. By contrast, a noncommutative simple
group, e.g., An for n 5, will not be solvable.
T HEOREM 6.4 (F EIT-T HOMPSON ) Every finite group of odd order is solvable.3
P ROOF. The proof occupies an entire issue of the Pacific Journal of Mathematics (Feit and
Thompson 1963). 2
In other words, every finite group is either solvable or contains an element of order 2.
For the role this theorem played in the classification of the finite simple groups, see p. 53.
For a more recent look at the Feit-Thompson theorem, see Glauberman 1999.
1
E XAMPLE 6.5 Consider the subgroups B D and U D of GL2 .F /,
0 0 1
some field F . Then U is a normal subgroup of B, and B=U ' F F , U ' .F; C/.
Hence B is solvable.
P ROPOSITION 6.6 (a) Every subgroup and every quotient group of a solvable group is
solvable.
(b) An extension of solvable groups is solvable.
P ROOF. (a) Let G F G1 F F Gn be a solvable series for G, and let H be a subgroup of G.
The homomorphism
x 7! xGi C1 W H \ Gi ! Gi =Gi C1
has kernel .H \ Gi / \ Gi C1 D H \ Gi C1 . Therefore, H \ Gi C1 is a normal subgroup of
H \ Gi and the quotient H \ Gi =H \ Gi C1 injects into Gi =Gi C1 , which is commutative.
We have shown that
H F H \ G1 F F H \ Gn
is a solvable series for H .
Let GN be a quotient group of G, and let GN i be the image of Gi in G.
N Then
GN F GN 1 F F GN n D f1g
3 Burnside (1897, p. 379) wrote:
No simple group of odd order is at present known to exist. An investigation as to the existence
or non-existence of such groups would undoubtedly lead, whatever the conclusion might be, to
results of importance; it may be recommended to the reader as well worth his attention. Also,
there is no known simple group whose order contains fewer than three different primes. . . .
Significant progress in the first problem was not made until Suzuki, M., The nonexistence of a certain type of
simple group of finite order, 1957. However, the second problem was solved by Burnside himself, who proved
using characters that any group whose order contains fewer than three different primes is solvable (see Alperin
and Bell 1995, p. 182).
Solvable groups 89
N
is a solvable series for G.
(b) Let N be a normal subgroup of G, and let GN D G=N . We have to show that if N
and GN are solvable, then so also is G. Let
GN F GN 1 F F GN n D f1g
N F N1 F F Nm D f1g
be solvable series for GN and N , and let Gi be the inverse image of GN i in G. Then Gi =Gi C1 '
GN i =GN i C1 (see 1.48), and so
G F G1 F F Gn .D N / F N1 F F Nm
Thus
Œx; y D 1 ” xy D yx;
and G is commutative if and only if every commutator equals 1.
E XAMPLE 6.8 For any finite-dimensional vector space V over a field k and any maximal
flag F D fVn ; Vn 1 ; : : :g in V , the group
is solvable. Indeed, let U.F / be the group defined in Example 5.10. Then B.F /=U.F / is
commutative, and, when k D Fp , U.F / is a p-group. This proves that B.F / is solvable
when k D Fp , and in the general case one defines subgroups B0 B1 of B.F / with
i.e., ' maps the commutator of x; y to the commutator of '.x/; '.y/. In particular, we see
that if H is commutative, then ' maps all commutators in G to 1.
The group G 0 D G .1/ generated by the commutators in G is called the commutator or
first derived subgroup of G.
90 6. S UBNORMAL S ERIES ; S OLVABLE AND N ILPOTENT G ROUPS
G G .1/ G .2/ ;
which is called the derived series of G. For example, when n 5, the derived series of Sn is
Sn An An An :
P ROPOSITION 6.10 A group G is solvable if and only if its kth derived subgroup G .k/ D 1
for some k.
P ROOF. If G .k/ D 1, then the derived series is a solvable series for G. Conversely, let
G D G0 F G1 F G2 F F Gs D 1
we see that
Continuing in the fashion, we find that G .i / Gi for all i , and hence G .s/ D 1. 2
Thus, a solvable group G has a canonical solvable series, namely the derived series, in
which all the groups are normal in G. The proof of the proposition shows that the derived
series is the shortest solvable series for G. Its length is called the solvable length of G.
A SIDE 6.11 Not every element of the commutator subgroup of a group is itself a commutator, but
the smallest groups where this occurs have order 96. This was shown by a computer search through
the libraries of small groups. See also mo44269.
Nilpotent groups 91
Nilpotent groups
Let G be a group. Recall that we write Z.G/ for the centre of G. Let Z 2 .G/ G be the
subgroup of G corresponding to Z.G=Z.G// G=Z.G/. Thus
g 2 Z 2 .G/ ” Œg; x 2 Z.G/ for all x 2 G:
Continuing in this fashion, we get a sequence of subgroups (ascending central series)
f1g Z.G/ Z 2 .G/
where
g 2 Z i .G/ ” Œg; x 2 Z i 1
.G/ for all x 2 G:
If Z m .G/ D G for some m, then G is said to be nilpotent, and the smallest such m is called
the (nilpotency) class of G. For example, all finite p-groups are nilpotent (apply 4.16).
Only the group f1g has class 0, and the groups of class 1 are exactly the commutative
groups. A group G is of class 2 if and only if G=Z.G/ is commutative — such a group is
said to be metabelian.
E XAMPLE 6.12 (a) A nilpotent group is obviously solvable, but the converse is false. For
example, for a field F , let
ˇ
a b ˇˇ
BD a; b; c 2 F; ac ¤ 0 :
0 c ˇ
Then Z.B/ D faI j a ¤ 0g, and the centre of B=Z.B/ is trivial. Therefore B=Z.B/ is not
nilpotent, but we saw in 8(6.5)
0 that it is1solvable.
9 80 19
< 1 = < 1 0 =
(b) The group G D @0 1 A is metabelian: its centre is @0 1 0 A , and
0 0 1 0 0 1
: ; : ;
G=Z.G/ is commutative.
(c) Any nonabelian group G of order p 3 is metabelian. In fact, G 0 D Z.G/ has order p
(see 5.17), and G=G 0 is commutative (4.18). In particular, the quaternion and dihedral groups
of order 8, Q and D4 , are metabelian. The dihedral group D2n is nilpotent of class n — this
can be proved by induction, using that Z.D2n / has order 2, and D2n =Z.D2n / D2n 1 . If
n is not a power of 2, then Dn is not nilpotent (use Theorem 6.18 below).
R EMARK 6.14 It should be noted that if H is a subgroup of G, then Z.H / may be bigger
than Z.G/. For example, the centre of
ˇ
a 0 ˇˇ
HD ab ¤ 0 GL2 .F /:
0 b ˇ
is H itself, but the centre of GL2 .F / consists only of the scalar matrices.
92 6. S UBNORMAL S ERIES ; S OLVABLE AND N ILPOTENT G ROUPS
Œ: : : ŒŒg1 ; g2 ; g3 ; : : : ; ; gmC1 D 1
G D Z m .G/ H) Œg1 ; g2 2 Z m 1
.G/ all g1 ; g2 2 G
H) ŒŒg1 ; g2 ; g3 2 Z m 2
.G/ all g1 ; g2 ; g3 2 G
H) Œ ŒŒg1 ; g2 ; g3 ; :::; gm 2 Z.G/ all g1 ; : : : ; gm 2 G
H) Œ ŒŒg1 ; g2 ; g3 ; : : : ; gmC1 D 1 all g1 ; : : : ; gm 2 G:
For example, the subgroup U of the group B in Examples 6.5 and 6.12 is commutative and
B=U is commutative, but B is not nilpotent.
However, the implication (27) holds when N is contained in the centre of G. In fact, we
have the following more precise result.
T HEOREM 6.18 A finite group is nilpotent if and only if it is equal to a direct product of its
Sylow subgroups.
P ROOF. A direct product of nilpotent groups is obviously nilpotent, and so the “if” direction
follows from the preceding corollary. For the converse, let G be a finite nilpotent group.
According to (5.9) it suffices to prove that all Sylow subgroups are normal. Let P be such a
subgroup of G, and let N D NG .P /. The first lemma below shows that NG .N / D N , and
the second then implies that N D G, i.e., that P is normal in G. 2
L EMMA 6.19 Let P be a Sylow p-subgroup of a finite group G. For any subgroup H of G
containing NG .P /, we have NG .H / D H .
P ROOF. Let g 2 NG .H /, so that gHg 1 D H . Then H gP g 1 D P 0 , which is a Sylow
p-subgroup of H . By Sylow II, hP 0 h 1 D P for some h 2 H , and so hgP g 1 h 1 P .
Hence hg 2 NG .P / H , and so g 2 H: 2
R EMARK 6.21 For a finite abelian group G we recover the fact that G is a direct product of
its p-primary subgroups.
T HEOREM 6.23 A finite group is nilpotent if and only if every maximal proper subgroup is
normal.
94 6. S UBNORMAL S ERIES ; S OLVABLE AND N ILPOTENT G ROUPS
P ROOF. We saw in Lemma 6.20 that for any proper subgroup H of a nilpotent group G,
H ¤ NG .H /. Hence,
H maximal H) NG .H / D G;
i.e., H is normal in G.
Conversely, suppose every maximal proper subgroup of G is normal. We shall check the
condition of Theorem 6.18. Thus, let P be a Sylow p-subgroup of G. If P is not normal in
G, then there exists a maximal proper subgroup H of G containing NG .P /. Being maximal,
H is normal, and so Frattini’s argument shows that G D H NG .P / D H — contradiction.2
Almost everything we have proved for groups also holds for groups with operators. In
particular, the Theorems 1.45, 1.46, and 1.47 hold for groups with operators. In each case,
the proof is the same as before except that admissibility must be checked.
def
T HEOREM 6.26 For any admissible homomorphism
W G ! G 0 of A-groups, N D Ker.
/
is an admissible normal subgroup of G,
.G/ is an admissible subgroup of G 0 , and
factors
in a natural way into the composite of an admissible surjection, an admissible isomorphism,
and an admissible injection:
'
G G=N !
.G/ ,! G 0 :
T HEOREM 6.27 Let G be a group with operators A, and let H and N be admissible
subgroups with N normal. Then H \ N is a normal admissible subgroup of H , HN
is an admissible subgroup of G, and h.H \ N / 7! hH is an admissible isomorphism
H=H \ N ! HN=N:
G G1 G2 Gr
E XAMPLE 6.29 (a) Consider G with G acting by conjugation. In this case an admissible
subnormal series is a sequence of subgroups
G D G0 G1 G2 Gs D f1g;
G D G0 G1 G2 Gs D f1g
with each Gi a characteristic subgroup of G, and the quotients of two admissible composition
series are isomorphic as Aut.G/-groups.
96 6. S UBNORMAL S ERIES ; S OLVABLE AND N ILPOTENT G ROUPS
Krull-Schmidt theorem
A group G is indecomposable if G ¤ 1 and G is not isomorphic to a direct product of two
nontrivial groups, i.e., if
G H H 0 H) H D 1 or H 0 D 1:
E XAMPLE 6.30 (a) A simple group is indecomposable, but an indecomposable group need
not be simple: it may have a normal subgroup. For example, S3 is indecomposable but has
C3 as a normal subgroup.
(b) A finite commutative group is indecomposable if and only if it is cyclic of prime-
power order.
Of course, this is obvious from the classification, but it is not difficult to prove it directly.
Let G be cyclic of order p n , and suppose that G H H 0 . Then H and H 0 must be
p-groups, and they can’t both be killed by p m , m < n. It follows that one must be cyclic
of order p n , and that the other is trivial. Conversely, suppose that G is commutative and
indecomposable. Since every finite commutative group is (obviously) a direct product of
p-groups with p running over the primes, G is a p-group. If g is an element of G of highest
order, one shows that hgi is a direct factor of G, G hgi H , which is a contradiction.
(c) Every finite group can be written as a direct product of indecomposable groups
(obviously).
R EMARK 6.33 (a) The Krull-Schmidt theorem holds also for an infinite group provided it
satisfies both chain conditions on subgroups, i.e., ascending and descending sequences of
subgroups of G become stationary.
(b) The Krull-Schmidt theorem also holds for groups with operators. For example,
let Aut.G/ operate on G; then the subgroups in the statement of the theorem will all be
characteristic.
(c) When applied to a finite abelian group, the theorem shows that the groups Cmi in a
decomposition G D Cm1 ::: Cmr with each mi a prime power are uniquely determined
up to isomorphism (and ordering).
4 Strictly,
this should be called the Wedderburn-Remak-Schmidt-Krull-Ore theorem — see the Wikipedia
entry for “Krull-Schmidt theorem”.
Exercises 97
Exercises
6-1 Let G be a group (not necessarily finite) with a finite composition series
G D G0 G1 Gn D 1;
N D N \ G0 N \ G1 N \ Gn D 1
becomes a composition series for N once the repetitions have been omitted.
6-2 If G1 and G2 are groups such that G10 G20 and G1 =G10 G2 =G20 , are G1 and G2
necessarily isomorphic? (Here 0 denotes the commutator subgroup.)
C HAPTER 7
Representations of Finite Groups
Throughout this chapter, G is a finite group and F is a field. All vector spaces are finite
dimensional.
An F -algebra is a ring A containing F in its centre and finite dimensional as an F -vector
space. We do not assume A to be commutative; for example, A could be P the matrix algebra
k
Mn .F /. Let e1 ; : : : ; en be a basis for A as an F -vector space; then ei ej D k aij ek for some
k
aij 2 F , called the structure constants of A relative to the basis .ei /i ; once a basis has been
chosen, the algebra A is uniquely determined by its structure constants.
All A-modules are finite dimensional when regarded as F -vector spaces. For an A-
module V , mV denotes the direct sum of m copies of V .
The opposite Aopp of an F -algebra A is the same F -algebra as A but with the multipli-
cation reversed, i.e., Aopp D .A; C; 0 / with a 0 b D ba. In other words, there is a one-to-one
correspondence a $ a0 W A $ Aopp which is an isomorphism of F -vector spaces and has the
property that a0 b 0 D .ba/0 .
An A-module M is simple if it is nonzero and contains no submodules except 0 and M ,
and it is semisimple if it is isomorphic to a direct sum of simple modules.
Matrix representations
A matrix representation of degree n of G over F is a homomorphism G ! GLn .F /. The
representation is said to be faithful if the homomorphism is injective. Thus a faithful
representation identifies G with group of n n matrices.
99
100 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
A SIDE 7.2 Recall that the Burnside problem asks whether every finitely generated group with
finite exponent is finite (see p. 37). Burnside proved that the problem has a positive answer for
subgroups of GLn .C/. Therefore, no infinite finitely generated group with finite exponent has a
faithful representation over C.
Roots of 1 in fields
As the last example indicates, the representations of a group over a field F depend on the
roots of 1 in the field. The nth roots of 1 in a field F form a subgroup n .F / of F , which
is cyclic (see 1.56).
If the characteristic of F divides n, then jn .F /j < n. Otherwise, X n 1 has distinct
roots (a multiple root would have to be a root of its derivative nX n 1 ), and we can always
arrange that jn .F /j D n by extending F , for example, by replacing a subfield F of C with
F Œ where D e 2 i=n , or by replacing F with F ŒX =.g.X // where g.X / is an irreducible
factor of X n 1 not dividing X m 1 for any proper divisor m of n:
An element of order n in F is called a primitive nth root of 1. To say that F contains a
primitive nth root of 1, , means that n .F / is a cyclic group of order n and that generates
it (and it implies that either F has characteristic 0 or it has characteristic a prime not dividing
n).
Linear representations
Recall (4.1) that we have defined the notion of a group G acting a set. When the set is an
F -vector space V , we say that the action is linear if the map
gV W V ! V , x 7! gx;
is linear for each g 2 G. Then gV has inverse the linear map .g 1 /V , and g 7! gV W G !
GL.V / is a homomorphism. Thus, from a linear action of G on V , we obtain a homomor-
phism of groups G ! GL.V /; conversely, every such homomorphism defines a linear action
of G on V . We call a homomorphism G ! GL.V / a linear representation of G on V . Note
that a linear representation of G on F n is just a matrix representation of degree n.
E XAMPLE 7.3 (a) Let G D Cn D h i, and assume that F contains a primitive nth root of 1,
say . Let G ! GL.V / be a linear representation of G. Then .L /n D . n /L D 1, and so
the minimum polynomial of L divides X n 1. As X n 1 has n distinct roots 0 ; : : : ; n 1
in F , the vector space V decomposes into a direct sum of eigenspaces
def
M
V D Vi ; Vi D fv 2 V j v D i vg.
0i n 1
(b) Let G be a commutative group of exponent n, and assume that F contains a primitive
nth root of 1. Let
G _ D Hom.G; F / D Hom.G; n .F //
To give a representation of G on a vector space V is the same as to give a direct sum
decomposition
def
M
V D V ; V D fv 2 V j v D . /vg.
_
2G
When G is cyclic, this is a restatement of (a), and the general case follows easily (decompose
V with respect to the action of one cyclic factor of G; then decompose each summand with
respect to the action of a second cyclic factor of G; and so on).
Maschke’s theorem
Let G ! GL.V / be a linear representation of G on an F -vector space V . A subspace W
of V is said to be G-invariant if gW W for all g 2 G. An F -linear map ˛W V ! V 0 of
vector spaces on which G acts linearly is said to be G-invariant if
Note that the theorem always applies when F has characteristic zero.
The condition on the characteristic is certainly necessary: let G D hi be the cyclic
2
group of order p, where p is the characteristic of F , and let acts on V D F as the matrix
1 1 (see 7.3b); the subspace . / is G-invariant, and its complementary subspaces are those
01 0
of the form F ab , b ¤ 0; none of them is G-invariant. In fact, in every representation of Cp
on a nonzero vector space over a field of characteristic p, there is a nonzero fixed vector.
Because of the importance of the ideas involved, we present two proofs of Maschke’s
theorem.
This completes the proof of Maschke’s theorem when F D R, because there certainly
exist positive definite symmetric bilinear forms on V . A similar argument using hermitian
forms applies when F D C (or, indeed, when F is any subfield of C).
A SIDE 7.8 A representation of a group G on a real vector space V is unitary if there exists a
G-invariant positive definite symmetric bilinear form on V . Lemma 7.6 shows that every unitary
representation is semisimple, and Lemma 7.7 shows that every real representation of a finite group is
unitary.
A linear action
g; v 7! gvW G V ! V
of G on an F -vector space extends uniquely to an action of F ŒG on V ,
X X
cg g; v 7! cg gvW F ŒG V ! V;
g2G g2G
which makes V into an F ŒG-module. The submodules for this action are exactly the
G-invariant subspaces.
Let G ! GL.V / be a linear representation of G. When V is simple (resp. semisimple)
as an F ŒG-module, the representation is usually said to be irreducible (resp. completely
reducible). However, I will call them simple (resp. semisimple) representations.
P ROPOSITION 7.9 If the characteristic of F does not divide jGj, then every F ŒG-module
is a direct sum of simple submodules.
P ROOF. Let V be a F ŒG-module. If V is simple, then there is nothing to prove. Otherwise,
it contains a nonzero proper submodule W . According to Maschke’s theorem, V D W ˚ W 0
with W 0 an F ŒG-submodule. If W and W 0 are simple, then the proof is complete; otherwise,
we can continue the argument, which terminates in a finite number of steps because V has
finite dimension as an F -vector space. 2
Semisimple modules
In this section, A is an F -algebra.
V D V0 V1 Vs D f0g
V D W0 W1 W t D f0g
is a second such filtration, then s D t and there is a permutation of f1; : : : ; sg such that
Vi =Vi C1 W .i / =W .i /C1 for all i .
P ROOF. This is a variant of the Jordan-Hölder theorem (6.2), which can be proved by the
same argument. 2
V V1 ˚ ˚ Vs W1 ˚ ˚ W t
with all the A-modules Vi and Wj simple. Then s D t and there is a permutation of
f1; : : : ; sg such that Vi W .i / .
P ROOF. Each decomposition defines a filtration, to which the proposition can be applied.2
P ROPOSITION
P 7.12 Let V be an A-module. If V is a sum of simple submodules, say
V D i 2I Si (the sum need not be direct), then for any submodule W of V , there is a subset
J of I such that M
V DW ˚ Si :
i 2J
def P
P ROOF. Let J be maximal among the subsets of I such the sum SJ D j 2J Sj is direct
and W \ SJ D 0. I claim that W C SJ D V (hence V is the direct sum of W and the Sj
with j 2 J ). For this, it suffices to show that each Si is contained in W C SJ . Because Si
is simple, Si \ .W C SJ / equals Si or 0. In the first case, Si W C SJ , and in the second
SJ \ Si D 0 and W \ .SJ C Si / D 0, contradicting the definition of I . 2
C OROLLARY 7.14 Sums, submodules, and quotient modules of semisimple modules are
semisimple.
P ROOF. Each is a sum of simple modules. 2
Simple F -algebras and their modules 105
It follows from (29) that L.i / is a minimal left ideal in Mn .F /. Note that Mn .F / is a
direct sum
Mn .F / D L.1/ ˚ ˚ L.n/
of minimal left ideals.
E XAMPLE 7.17 For a; b 2 F , let H.a; b/ be the F -algebra with basis 1; i; j; k (as an
F -vector space) and with the multiplication determined by
i 2 D a; j 2 D b; ij D k D j i
(so ik D i ij D aj etc.). Then H.a; b/ is an F -algebra, called a quaternion algebra over F .
For example, if F D R, then H. 1; 1/ is the usual quaternion algebra. One can show that
H.a; b/ is either a division algebra or it is isomorphic to M2 .F /. In particular, it is simple.
106 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
7.18 Much of linear algebra does not require that the field be commutative. For example,
the usual arguments show that a finitely generated module V over a division algebra D has a
basis, and that all bases have the same number n of elements — n is called the dimension of
V . In particular, all finitely generated D-modules are free.
7.19 Let A be an F -algebra, and let A A denote A regarded as a left A-module. Right
multiplication x 7! xa on A A by an element a of A is an A-linear endomorphism of A A.
Moreover, every A-linear map 'WA A ! A A is of this form with a D '.1/. Thus,
and so
EndA .A A/ ' Aopp (as F -algebras).
More generally,
EndA .V / ' Aopp
for any A-module V that is free of rank 1, and
C ENTRALIZERS
Let A be an F -subalgebra of an F -algebra B. The centralizer of A in B is
It is again an F -subalgebra of B.
T HEOREM 7.23 Every simple F -algebra is isomorphic to Mn .D/ for some n and some
division F -algebra D.
P ROOF. Choose a simple A-module S , for example, any minimal left ideal of A. Then A
acts faithfully on S, because the kernel of A ! EndF .S / will be a two-sided ideal of A not
containing 1, and hence is 0.
Let D be the centralizer of A in the F -algebra EndF .S / of F -linear maps S ! S .
According to the double centralizer theorem (7.21), the centralizer of D in EndF .S / is
A, i.e., A D EndD .S /. Schur’s lemma (7.24 below) implies that D is a division algebra.
Therefore S is a free D-module (7.18), say, S D n , and so EndD .S / Mn .D opp / (see
7.19). 2
L EMMA 7.24 (S CHUR ’ S L EMMA ) For every F -algebra A and simple A-module S , EndA .S /
is a division algebra.
P ROOF. Let
be an A-linear map S ! S . Then Ker.
/ is an A-submodule of S, and so it
is either S or 0. In the first case,
is zero, and in the second it is an isomorphism, i.e., it has
an inverse that is also A-linear. 2
108 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
P ROPOSITION 7.25 Any two minimal left ideals of a simple F -algebra are isomorphic as
left A-modules, and A A is a direct sum of its minimal left ideals.
P ROOF. After Theorem 7.23, we may assume that A D Mn .D/ for some division algebra
D. We saw inL(7.16) that the minimal left ideals in Mn .D/ are those of the form L.fj g/.
Clearly A D 1j n L.fj g/ and each L.fj g/ is isomorphic to D n with its natural action
of Mn .D/. 2
T HEOREM 7.26 Let A be a simple F -algebra, and let S be a simple A-module. Then every
A-module is isomorphic to a direct sum of copies of S .
P ROOF. Let S0 be a minimal left ideal of A. The proposition shows that A A S0n for some
n. Let e1 ; : : : ; er be a set of generators for V as an A-module. The map
X
.a1 ; : : : ; ar / 7! a i ei
C OROLLARY 7.27 Let A be a simple F -algebra. Then any two simple A-modules are
isomorphic, and any two A-modules having the same dimension over F are isomorphic.
P ROOF. Obvious from the Theorem. 2
P ROPOSITION 7.29 When F is algebraically closed, the only division algebra over F is F
itself.
P ROOF. Let D be division algebra over F . For any ˛ 2 D, the F -subalgebra F Œ˛ of D
generated by ˛ is a field (because it is an integral domain of finite degree over F ). Therefore
˛ 2 F. 2
A SIDE 7.30 The classification of the isomorphism classes of division algebras over a field F is
one the most difficult and interesting problems in algebra and number theory. For F D R, the only
division algebra is the usual quaternion algebra. For F finite, the only division algebra with centre F
is F itself (theorem of Wedderburn).
Semisimple F -algebras and their modules 109
A division algebra over F whose centre is F is said to be central (formerly normal). Brauer
showed that the set of isomorphism classes of central division algebras over a field form a group,
called (by Hasse and Noether) the Brauer group1 of the field. The statements in the last paragraph
show that the Brauer groups of algebraically closed fields and finite fields are zero, and the Brauer
group of R has order 2. The Brauer groups of Q and its finite extensions were computed by Albert,
Brauer, Hasse, and Noether in the 1930s as a consequence of class field theory.
E XAMPLE 7.31 Let A be a finite product of simple F -algebras. Then every minimal left
ideal of a simple factor of A is a simple A-submodule of A A. Therefore, A A is a direct sum
of simple A-modules, and so is semisimple. Since every A-module is a quotient of a direct
sum of copies of A A, this shows that A is semisimple.
Before stating the main result of this section, we recall some elementary module theory.
M D M1 ˚ ˚ Mn
N D N1 ˚ ˚ Nm :
˛.0; : : : ; 0; xj ; 0; : : : ; 0/ D .y1 ; : : : ; ym /:
Thus, we see
HomA .M; N / ' HomA .Mj ; Ni / 1j n, 1i m (30)
1 The tensor product D ˝F D 0 of two central simple algebras over F is again a central simple algebra, and
hence is isomorphic to Mr .D 00 / for some central simple algebra D 00 . Define
ŒDŒD 0 D ŒD 00 :
This product is associative because of the associativity of tensor products, the isomorphism class of F is an
identity element, and ŒD opp is an inverse for ŒD.
110 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
T HEOREM 7.33 Let V be a finite dimensional F -vector space, and let A be an F -subalgebra
of EndF .V /. If V is semisimple as an A-module, then the centralizer of A in EndF .V / is a
product of simple F -algebras (hence it is a semisimple F -algebra).
L
P ROOF. By assumption, we can write V i ri Si where the Si are simple A-modules, no
which are isomorphic. The centralizer of A in EndF .V / is EndA .V /, and EndA .V /
two of L
EndA . i ri Si /. Because HomA .Sj ; Si / D 0 for i ¤ j ,
M Y
EndA . ri Si / ' EndA .ri Si / by (30)
Yi
' Mri .Di / by (31)
i
where Di D EndA .Si /. According to Schur’s lemma (7.24), Di is a division algebra, and
therefore Mri .Di / is a simple F -algebra (see 7.16). 2
The representations of G
P ROPOSITION 7.36 The dimension of the centre of F ŒG as an F -vector space is the
number of conjugacy classes in G.
P ROOF. Let C1 ; : : : ; C t be the conjugacy classes in G, and, for each i , let ci be the element
P
a2Ci a in F ŒG. We shall prove the stronger statement:
As c1 ; : : : ; c t are obviously
P linearly independent, it suffices to show that they span the centre.
For any g 2 G and a2G ma a 2 F ŒG,
X X
g ma a g 1 D ma gag 1 :
a2G a2G
P
R EMARK 7.37 An element a2G ma a of F ŒG can be regarded as a map a 7! ma W G ! F .
In this way, F ŒG ' Map.G; F /. The action of G on F ŒG corresponds to the action
.gf /.a/ D f .g 1 a/ of g 2 G on f W G ! F . In the above proof, we showed that the
elements of the centre of F ŒG correspond exactly to the functions f W G ! F that are
constant on each conjugacy class. Such functions are called class functions.
P ROPOSITION 7.38 The group algebra F ŒG is isomorphic to a product of matrix algebras
over F .
P ROOF. Recall that, when F has characteristic zero, Maschke’s theorem (7.9) implies that
F ŒG is semisimple, and so is a product of simple algebras (7.35). Each of these is a matrix
algebra over a division algebra (7.23), but the only division algebra over an algebraically
closed field is the field itself (7.29). 2
T HEOREM 7.39 (a) The number of isomorphism classes of simple F ŒG-modules is equal
to the number of conjugacy classes in G.
(b) The multiplicity of any simple representation S in the regular representation is equal
to its degree dimF S .
(c) Let S1 ; : : : ; S t be a set of representatives for the isomorphism classes of simple
F G-modules, and let fi D dimF Si . Then
X
fi2 D jGj:
1it
112 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
P ROOF. (a) Under our hypothesis, F ŒG Mf1 .F / Mf t .F / for some integers
f1 ; : : : ; f t . According to Theorem 7.35, the number of isomorphism classes of simple
F ŒG-modules is the number of factors t. The centre of a product of F -algebras is the
product of their centres, and so the centre of F ŒG is isomorphic to tF . Therefore t is the
dimension of the centre of F , which we know equals the number of conjugacy classes of G.
(b) With the notations of (7.15), Mf .F / ' L.1/ ˚ ˚ L.f /.
(c) The equality is simply the statement
X
dimF Mfi .F / D dimF F ŒG:
1i t 2
The characters of G
P
Recall that the trace TrV .˛/ of an endomorphism ˛W V ! V of a vector space V is ai i
where .aij / is the matrix of ˛ with respect to some basis for V . It is independent of the
choice of the basis (the traces of conjugate matrices are equal).
From each representation of g 7! gV W G ! GL.V /, we obtain a function V on G;
called the character of . Note that V depends only on the isomorphism class of the
F ŒG-module V , and that V is a class function. The character is said to be simple (or
irreducible) if it is defined by a simple F G-module. The principal character 1 is that
defined by the trivial representation of G (so 1 .g/ D 1 for all g 2 G), and the regular
character reg is that defined by the regular representation. On computing reg .g/ by using
the elements of G as a basis for F ŒG, one see that reg .g/ is the number of elements a of
G such that ga D a, and so
jGj if g D e
reg .g/ D
0 otherwise.
When V has dimension 1, the character V of is said to be linear. In this case, GL.V / '
F , and so V .g/ D .g/. Therefore, V is a homomorphism G ! F , and so this
definition of “linear character” essentially agrees with the earlier one.
V ˚V 0 D V C V 0 :
P ROOF. Compute the matrix of gL with respect to a basis of V ˚ V 0 that is made by
combining a basis for V with a basis for V 0 . 2
Therefore, X
ci i .ej / D cj fj ,
i
from which the claim follows. 2
P ROPOSITION 7.42 Two F ŒG-modules are isomorphic if and only if their characters are
equal.
P ROOF. We have already observed that the character
L of a representation depends only
on its isomorphism
P class. Conversely, if V D 1i t ci Si , ci 2 N, then its character is
V D 1i t ci i , and (33) shows that ci D V .ei /=fi . Therefore V determines the
multiplicity with which each Si occurs in V , and hence it determines the isomorphism class
of V . 2
A SIDE 7.43 The proposition is false if F is allowed to have characteristic p ¤ 0. For example,
the representation i 7! 10 1i W Cp ! GL2 .F / of (7.1c) is not trivial, but it has the same character
as the trivial representation. The proposition is false even when the characteristic of F doesn’t
divide the order of the group, because, for any representation G ! GL.V /, the character of the
representation of G on pV is identically zero. However, a theorem of Brauer and Nesbitt says that,
for finite-dimensional representations 1 and 2 of an F -algebra A, if 1 .a/ and 2 .a/ have the same
characteristic polynomials for all a 2 A, then the representations are isomorphic (cf. mo6560).
P ROPOSITION 7.44 The simple characters of G form a Z-basis for the virtual characters of
G.
P ROOF. Let 1 ; : : : ; t be the simple characters of G. P
Then the characters of G are exactly
the class functions that can be expressed in the form mi i ,P mi 2 N, and so the virtual
characters are exactly the class functions that can be expressed mi i , mi 2 Z. Therefore
the simple characters certainly generate the Z-module of virtual characters, and Proposition
7.41 shows that they are linearly independent over Z (even over F ). 2
P ROPOSITION 7.45 The simple characters of G form an F -basis for the class functions on
G.
P ROOF. The class functions are the functions from the set of conjugacy classes in G to
F . As this set has t elements, they form an F -vector space of dimension t . As the simple
characters are a set of t linearly independent elements of this vector space, they must form a
basis. 2
2 Some authors call it a generalized character, but this is to be avoided: there is more than one way to
generalize the notion of a character.
114 7. R EPRESENTATIONS OF F INITE G ROUPS
L EMMA 7.46 The pairing . j / is an inner product on the F -space of class functions on G.
P ROOF. We have to check:
˘ .f1 C f2 jf / D .f1 jf / C .f2 jf / for all class functions f1 ; f2 ; f ;
˘ .cf1 jf2 / D c.f1 ; f2 / for c 2 F and class functions f1 ; f2 ;
˘ .f2 jf1 / D .f1 jf2 / for all class functions f1 ; f2 ;
˘ .f jf / > 0 for all nonzero class functions f .
All of these are obvious from the definition. 2
V G D fv 2 V j gv D v for all g 2 Gg
1 P
L EMMA 7.47 Let be the element jGj a2G a of F ŒG. For any F ŒG-module V , V is
G
a projector with image V .
P ROOF. For any g 2 G,
1 X 1 X
g D ga D a D ; (34)
jGj a2G jGj a2G
from which it follows that D (in the F -algebra F ŒG). Therefore, for any F ŒG-
module V , V2 D V and so V is a projector. If v is in its image, say v D v0 , then
.34/
gv D gv0 D v0 D v
1
and so v lies in V G . Conversely, if v 2 V G , the obviously v D
P
jGj a2G av D v, and so
v is in the image of . 2
P ROOF. The group G acts on the space HomF .V; W / of F -linear maps V ! W by the
rule,
.g'/.v/ D g.'.gv//; g 2 G; ' 2 HomF .V; W /; v 2 V;
and HomF .V; W /G D HomF G .V; W /. 2
1 if D 0
0
.j / D
0 otherwise.
Therefore the simple characters form an orthonormal basis for the space of class functions
on G.
Examples
To be written.
Exercises
7-1 Let C be an n r matrix with coefficients in a field F . Show that
fM 2 Mn .F / j M C D 0g
is a left ideal in Mn .F /, and that every left ideal is of this form for some C .
7-2 This exercise shows how to recover a finite group G from its category of representations
over a field k. Let S be a finite set, and let A be the set of maps S ! k.
(a) Show that A becomes a commutative ring with the product
and that the ks are exactly the minimal k-subalgebras of A. Deduce that Endk-alg .A/ '
Sym.S /.
(c) Let .f1 ; f2 / 2 A A act on S S by .f1 ; f2 /.s1 ; s2 / D f1 .s1 /f2 .s2 /; show that this
defines a bijection A ˝ A ' Map.S S; k/. Now take S D G.
(d) Show that the map rA W G ! Endk-linear .A/,
(e) Define W A ! A ˝ A by .f /.g1 ; g2 / D f .g1 g2 /. Show that, for any homomor-
phism ˛W A ! A of k-algebras such .1 ˝ ˛/ ı D ı ˛, there exists a unique element
g 2 G such that ˛.f / D gf for all f 2 A. [Hint: Deduce from (b) that there exists a
bijection W G ! G such that .˛f / .g/ D f .g/ for all g 2 G. From the hypothesis
on ˛, deduce that .g1 g2 / D g1 .g2 / for all g1 ; g2 2 G.R/. Hence .g/ D g .e/
for all g 2 G. Deduce that ˛.f / D .e/f for all f 2 A.]
(f) Show that the following maps are G-equivariant
(g) Suppose that we are given, for each finite dimensional representation .V; rV /, a k-
linear map V . If the family .V / satisfies the conditions
i) for all representations V , W , V ˝W D V ˝ W I
ii) for k with its trivial representation, k D idk ;
iii) for all G-equivariant maps ˛W V ! W , W ı ˛ D ˛ ı V I
then there exists a unique g 2 G.R/ such that V D rV .g/ for all V . [Hint: show that
A satisfies the conditions of (d).]
N OTES For a historical account of the representation theory of finite groups, emphasizing the work
of “the four principal contributors to the theory in its formative stages: Ferdinand Georg Frobenius,
William Burnside, Issai Schur, and Richard Brauer”, see Curtis 1999.
At a time when many physicists were considering giving up on even the possibility of
developing an understanding of particle physics using the techniques that had worked
so well with QED, Gell-Mann, in 1961, discovered the importance of group theory,
which gave him a mathematical tool to classify the plethora of new elementary particles
according to their symmetry properties.. . . In Gell-Mann’s scheme . . . , the different
particles fell into sets of representations whose properties . . . could be graphed so that
they formed the vertices of a polyhedron, and all of the particles in each polyhedron
could then be transformed into each other by symmetries, which could effectively rotate
the polyhedron in different directions.
Lawrence Krauss, Quantum Man, p.288
A PPENDIX A
Additional Exercises
34. Prove that a finite group G having just one maximal subgroup must be a cyclic p-group,
p prime.
35. Let a and b be two elements of S76 . If a and b both have order 146 and ab D ba, what
are the possible orders of the product ab?
37. Suppose that the group G is generated by a set X.
(a) Show that if gxg 1 2 X for all x 2 X; g 2 G, then the commutator subgroup of G is
generated by the set of all elements xyx 1 y 1 for x; y 2 X.
(b) Show that if x 2 D 1 for all x 2 X , then the subgroup H of G generated by the set of
all elements xy for x; y 2 X has index 1 or 2.
38. Suppose p 3 and 2p 1 are both prime numbers (e.g., p D 3; 7; 19; 31; : : :/. Prove, or
disprove by example, that every group of order p.2p 1/ is commutative.
39. Let H be a subgroup of a group G. Prove or disprove the following:
(a) If G is finite and P is a Sylow p-subgroup, then H \ P is a Sylow p-subgroup of H .
(b) If G is finite, P is a Sylow p-subgroup, and H NG .P /, then NG .H / D H .
(c) If g is an element of G such that gHg 1 H , then g 2 NG .H /.
117
118 A. A DDITIONAL E XERCISES
53. Let G be a group of order 33 25. Show that G is solvable. (Hint: A first step is to find a
normal subgroup of order 11 using the Sylow theorems.)
54. Suppose that ˛ is an endomorphism of the group G that maps G onto G and commutes
with all inner automorphisms of G. Show that if G is its own commutator subgroup, then
˛x D x for all x in G.
55. Let G be a finite group with generators s and t each of order 2. Let n D .G W 1/=2.
(a) Show that G has a cyclic subgroup of order n. Now assume n odd.
(b) Describe all conjugacy classes of G.
(c) Describe all subgroups of G of the form C.x/ D fy 2 Gjxy D yxg, x 2 G.
(d) Describe all cyclic subgroups of G.
(e) Describe all subgroups of G in terms of (b) and (d).
(f) Verify that any two p-subgroups of G are conjugate .p prime).
56. Let G act transitively on a set X. Let N be a normal subgroup of G, and let Y be the set
of orbits of N in X. Prove that:
(a) There is a natural action of G on Y which is transitive and shows that every orbit of
N on X has the same cardinality.
(b) Show by example that if N is not normal then its orbits need not have the same
cardinality.
119
57. Prove that every maximal subgroup of a finite p-group is normal of prime index .p is
prime).
58. A group G is metacyclic if it has a cyclic normal subgroup N with cyclic quotient G=N .
Prove that subgroups and quotient groups of metacyclic groups are metacyclic. Prove or
disprove that direct products of metacyclic groups are metacylic.
59. Let G be a group acting doubly transitively on X , and let x 2 X. Prove that:
(a) The stabilizer Gx of x is a maximal subgroup of G.
(b) If N is a normal subgroup of G, then either N is contained in Gx or it acts transitively
on X.
60. Let x; y be elements of a group G such that xyx 1 D y 5 , x has order 3, and y ¤ 1 has
odd order. Find (with proof) the order of y.
61. Let H be a maximal subgroup of G, and let A be a normal subgroup of H and such that
the conjugates of A in G generate it.
(a) Prove that if N is a normal subgroup of G, then either N H or G D NA.
(b) Let M be the intersection of the conjugates of H in G. Prove that if G is equal to its
commutator subgroup and A is abelian, then G=M is a simple group.
62. (a) Prove that the centre of a nonabelian group of order p 3 , p prime, has order p.
(b) Exhibit a nonabelian group of order 16 whose centre is not cyclic.
63. Show that the group with generators ˛ and ˇ and defining relations
˛ 2 D ˇ 2 D .˛ˇ/3 D 1
is isomorphic with the symmetric group S3 of degree 3 by giving, with proof, an explicit
isomorphism.
64. Prove or give a counter-example:
(a) Every group of order 30 has a normal subgroup of order 15.
(b) Every group of order 30 is nilpotent.
65. Let t 2 Z, and let G be the group with generators x; y and relations xyx 1 D y t , x 3 D 1.
(a) Find necessary and sufficient conditions on t for G to be finite.
(b) In case G is finite, determine its order.
67. Let X be a set with p n elements, p prime, and let G be a finite group acting transitively
on X. Prove that every Sylow p-subgroup of G acts transitively on X.
68. Let G D ha; b; c j bc D cb, a4 D b 2 D c 2 D 1; aca 1 D c, aba 1 D bci. Determine
the order of G and find the derived series of G.
69. Let N be a nontrivial normal subgroup of a nilpotent group G. Prove that N \ Z.G/ ¤ 1.
70. Do not assume Sylow’s theorems in this problem.
120 A. A DDITIONAL E XERCISES
(a) Let H be a subgroup of a finite group G, and P a Sylow p-subgroup of G. Prove that
there exists an x 2 G such that xP x 1 \ H0 is a Sylow1p-subgroup of H .
1 :::
B0 1 C
(b) Prove that the group of n n matrices B @ :::
C is a Sylow p-subgroup of
A
0 1
GLn .Fp /.
(c) Indicate how (a) and (b) can be used to prove that any finite group has a Sylow
p-subgroup.
71. Suppose H is a normal subgroup of a finite group G such that G=H is cyclic of order n,
where n is relatively prime to .G W 1/. Prove that G is equal to the semidirect product H Ì S
with S a cyclic subgroup of G of order n.
72. Let H be a minimal normal subgroup of a finite solvable group G. Prove that H is
isomorphic to a direct sum of cyclic groups of order p for some prime p.
73. (a) Prove that subgroups A and B of a group G are of finite index in G if and only if
A \ B is of finite index in G.
(b) An element x of a group G is said to be an FC-element if its centralizer CG .x/ has finite
index in G. Prove that the set of all F C elements in G is a normal.
74. Let G be a group of order p 2 q 2 for primes p > q. Prove that G has a normal subgroup
of order p n for some n 1.
75. (a) Let K be a finite nilpotent group, and let L be a subgroup of K such that L ıK D K,
where ıK is the derived subgroup. Prove that L D K. [You may assume that a finite group
is nilpotent if and only if every maximal subgroup is normal.]
(b) Let G be a finite group. If G has a subgroup H such that both G=ıH and H are nilpotent,
prove that G is nilpotent.
76. Let G be a finite noncyclic p-group. Prove that the following are equivalent:
(a) .G W Z.G// p 2 .
(b) Every maximal subgroup of G is abelian.
(c) There exist at least two maximal subgroups that are abelian.
77. Prove that every group G of order 56 can be written (nontrivially) as a semidirect product.
Find (with proofs) two non-isomorphic non-abelian groups of order 56.
78. Let G be a finite group and ' W G ! G a homomorphism.
(a) Prove that there is an integer n 0 such that ' n .G/ D ' m .G/ for all integers m n.
Let ˛ D ' n .
(b) Prove that G is the semi-direct product of the subgroups Ker ˛ and Im ˛.
(c) Prove that Im ˛ is normal in G or give a counterexample.
79. Let S be a set of representatives for the conjugacy classes in a finite group G and let H
be a subgroup of G. Show that S H H) H D G.
80. Let G be a finite group.
(a) Prove that there is a unique normal subgroup K of G such that (i) G=K is solvable
and (ii) if N is a normal subgroup and G=N is solvable, then N K.
(b) Show that K is characteristic.
(c) Prove that K D ŒK; K and that K D 1 or K is nonsolvable.
A PPENDIX B
Solutions to the Exercises
These solutions fall somewhere between hints and complete solutions. Students were expected
to write out complete solutions.
1-1 By inspection, the only element of order 2 is c D a2 D b 2 . Since gcg 1 also has order
2, it must equal c, i.e., gcg 1 D c for all g 2 Q. Thus c commutes with all elements of Q,
and f1; cg is a normal subgroup of Q. The remaining subgroups have orders 1, 4, or 8, and
are automatically normal (see 1.36a).
n
1 1 1 1 1 n
1-2 The product ab D , and D .
0 1 0 1 0 1
1-3 Consider the subsets fg; g 1 g of G. Each set has exactly 2 elements unless g has order
1 or 2, in which case it has 1 element. Since G is a disjoint union of these sets, there must be
a (nonzero) even number of sets with 1 element, and hence at least one element of order 2.
1-4 The symmetric group Sn contains a subgroup that is a direct product of subgroups Sn1 ,
. . . , Snr .
1-5 Because the group G=N has order n, .gN /n D 1 for every g 2 G (see 1.27). But
.gN /n D g n N , and so g n 2 N . For the second statement, consider the subgroup f1; sg of
D3 . It has index 3 in D3 , but the element t has order 2, and so t 3 D t … f1; sg.
121
122 B. S OLUTIONS TO THE E XERCISES
1-8 By assumption, the set G is nonempty, so let a 2 G. Because G satisfies the cancellation
law, the map x 7! axW G ! G is a permutuation of G, and some power of this permutation
is the identity permutation. Therefore, for some n 1, an x D x for all x 2 G, and so an is
a left neutral element. By counting, one sees that every element has a left inverse, and so we
can apply (1.10a).
1-9 Let b be such that the right multiplication x 7! xb is injective. Let a0 2 G; there is
a unique e 2 G such that a0 e D a0 . Then a0 eb D a0 b, which implies that eb D b. Then
aeb D ab for all a 2 A, which implies that ae D a. Therefore e is a right neutral element.
For each a 2 G, there is a unique a0 such that aa0 D e. Therefore G also has right inverses,
and so it is a group (1.10a).
Let G be a set, and consider the binary operation a; b 7! b on G. This is associative, and
all left multiplications are bijective (in fact, the identity map), but G is not a group if it has
at least two elements.
2-1 The key point is that hai D ha2 i han i. Apply (1.50) to see that D2n breaks up as a
product.
2-2 Note first that any group generated by a commuting set of elements must be commu-
tative, and so the group G in the problem is commutative. According to (2.8), any map
fa1 ; : : : ; an g ! A with A commutative extends uniquely to homomorphism G ! A, and so
G has the universal property that characterizes the free abelian group on the generators ai .
then a D b. (b) is similar. (c) The reduced form of x n , x ¤ 1, has length at least n.
2-4 (a) Universality. (b) C1 C1 is commutative, and the only commutative free groups
are 1 and C1 . (c) Suppose a is a nonempty reduced word in x1 ; : : : ; xn , say a D xi (or
def
xi 1 ). For j ¤ i , the reduced form of Œxj ; a D xj axj 1 a 1 can’t be empty, and so a and
xj don’t commute.
2-5 The unique element of order 2 is b 2 . Since gb 2 g 1 also has order 2 for any g 2 Qn ,
we see that gb 2 g 1 D b 2 , and so b 2 lies in the centre. [Check that it is the full centre.]
n 2
The quotient group Qn =hb 2 i has generators a and b, and relations a2 D 1, b 2 D 1,
bab 1 D a 1 , which is a presentation for D2n 2 (see 2.9).
2-6 (a) A comparison of the presentation Dn D hr; s j r n ; s 2 ; srsr D 1i with that for G
suggests putting r D ab and s D a. Check (using 2.8) that there are homomorphisms:
1
Dn ! G; r 7! ab; s 7! a; G ! Dn ; a 7! s; b 7! s r.
2-8 The elements x 2 , xy, y 2 lie in the kernel, and it is easy to see that hx; yjx 2 ; xy; y 2 i has
order (at most) 2, and so they must generate the kernel (at least as a normal group — the
problem is unclear). One can prove directly that these elements are free, or else apply the
Nielsen-Schreier theorem (2.6). Note that the formula on p. 34 (correctly) predicts that the
kernel is free of rank 2 2 2 C 1 D 3
2-9 We have to show that if s and t are elements of a finite group satisfying t 1 s 3 t D s 5 ,
then the given element g is equal to 1. Because the group is finite, s n D 1 for some n. If 3jn,
the proof is easy, and so we suppose that gcd.3; n/ D 1. But then
3r C nr 0 D 1, some r; r 0 2 Z;
and so s 3r D s. Hence
1 1 3r 1 3
t st D t s t D .t s t /r D s 5r :
Now,
1 1 1 1 1 5r
gDs .t s t /s.t st / D s s ss 5r D 1;
as required. [In such a question, look for a pattern. Note that g has two conjugates in it, as
does the relation for G, and so it is natural to try to relate them.]
3-1 Let N be the unique subgroup of order 2 in G. Then G=N has order 4, but there is no
subgroup Q G of order 4 with Q \ N D 1 (because every group of order 4 contains a
group of order 2), and so G ¤ N Ì Q for any Q. A similar argument applies to subgroups
N of order 4.
3-3 Show that GL2 .F2 / permutes the 3 nonzero vectors in F2 F2 (2-dimensional vector
space over F2 ).
3-4 The following solutions were suggested by readers. We write the quaternion group as
Q D f˙1; ˙i; ˙j; ˙kg:
(A) Take a cube. Write the six elements of Q of order 4 on the six faces with i opposite i ,
etc.. Each rotation of the cube induces an automorphism of Q, and Aut.Q/ is the symmetry
group of the cube, S4 . (B) The group Q has one element of order 2, namely 1, and six
elements of order 4, namely, ˙i , ˙j , ˙k. Any automorphism ˛ of Q must map 1 to itself
and permute the elements of order 4. Note that ij D k, j k D i , ki D j , so ˛ must send the
circularly ordered set i; j; k to a similar set, i.e., to one of the eight sets in the following
table:
i j k i j k
i j k i j k
i k j i k j
i k j i k j
Because ˛. 1/ D 1, ˛ must permute the rows of the table, and it is not difficult to see that
all permutations are possible.
124 B. S OLUTIONS TO THE E XERCISES
satisfies the conditions (i), (ii), (iii) of (3.8). For example, for (i) (Maple says that)
1 1 0 b
C d1 .b C ab/
0 10 10 1
a 0 b 1 0 b a 0 b 1 0 d
c
@ 0 a c A @0 1 c A @ 0 a c A D @0 1
d
C d1 .c C ac/ A
0 0 d 0 0 1 0 0 d 0 0 1
It is not a direct product of the two groups because it is not commutative.
3-6 Let g generate C1 . Then the only other generator is g 1 , and the only nontrivial
automorphism is g 7! g 1 . Hence Aut.C1 / D f˙1g. The homomorphism S3 ! Aut.S3 /
is injective because Z.S3 / D 1, but S3 has exactly 3 elements a1 ; a2 ; a3 of order 2 and 2
elements b; b 2 of order 3. The elements a1 ; b generate S3 , and there are only 6 possibilities
for ˛.a1 /, ˛.b/, and so S3 ! Aut.S3 / is also onto.
3-7 (a) The element g o.q/ 2 N , and so has order dividing jN j. (c) The element g D
.1; 4; 3/.2; 5/, and so this is obvious. (d) By the first part, ..1; 0; : : : ; 0/; q/p D ..1; : : : ; 1/; 1/,
and .1; : : : ; 1/ has order p in .Cp /p . (e) We have .n; q/.n; q/ D .nn 1 ; qq/ D .1; 1/:
4-1 Let 'W G=H1 ! G=H2 be a G-map, and let '.H1 / D gH2 . For a 2 G, '.aH1 / D
a'.H1 / D agH2 . When a 2 H1 , '.aH1 / D gH2 , and so agH2 D gH2 ; hence g 1 ag 2 H2 ,
and so a 2 gH2 g 1 . We have shown H1 gH2 g 1 . Conversely, if g satisfies this condition,
the aH1 7! agH2 is a well-defined map of G-sets.
4-2 (a) Let H be a proper subgroup of G, and let N D NG .H /. The number of conjugates
of H is .G W N / .G W H / (see 4.8). Since each conjugate of H has .H W 1/ elements and
the conjugates overlap (at least) in f1g, we see that
ˇ[ ˇ
ˇ gHg 1 ˇ < .G W H /.H W 1/ D .G W 1/:
ˇ ˇ
(b) Use that the action of G on the left cosets of H defines a homomorphism 'W G ! Sn ,
and look at the finite group G= Ker.'/.
(c) Let G D GLn .k/ with k an algebraically closed field. Every element of G is conjugate
to an upper triangular matrix (its Jordan form). Therefore G is equal to the union of the
conjugates of the subgroup of upper triangular matrices.
(d) Choose S to be a set of representatives for the conjugacy classes.
125
4-3 Let H be a subgroup of a finite group G, and assume that H contains at least one
element from each conjugacy class of G. Then G is the union of the conjugates of H , and
so we can apply Exercise 4-2. (According to Serre 2003, this result goes back to Jordan in
the 1870s.)
4-4 According to 4.17, 4.18, there is a normal subgroup N of order p 2 , which is commuta-
tive. Now show that G has an element c of order p not in N , and deduce that G D N Ì hci,
etc..
4-6 Embed G into S2m , and let N D A2m \ G. Then G=N ,! S2m =A2m D C2 , and so
.G W N / 2. Let a be an element of order 2 in G, and let b1 ; : : : ; bm be a set of right coset
representatives for hai in G, so that G D fb1 ; ab1 ; : : : ; bm ; abm g. The image of a in S2m is
the product of the m transpositions .b1 ; ab1 /; : : : ; .bm ; abm /, and since m is odd, this implies
that a … N .
4-7 The set X of k-cycles in Sn is normal, and so the group it generates is normal (1.38).
But, when n 5, the only nontrivial normal subgroups of Sn are An and Sn itself. If k is
odd, then X is contained in An , and if k is even, then it isn’t.
4-8 (a) The number of possible first rows is 23 1; of second rows 23 2; of third rows
23 22 ; whence .G W 1/ D 7 6 4 D 168. (b) Let V D F32 . Then jV j D 23 D 8. Each line
through the origin contains exactly one point ¤ origin, and so jX j D 7. (c) We make a list
of possible characteristic and minimal polynomials:
Here size denotes the number of elements in the conjugacy class. Case 5: Let ˛ be
an endomorphism with characteristic polynomial X 3 C X C 1. Check from its minimal
polynomial that ˛ 7 D 1, and so ˛ has order 7. Note that V is a free F2 Œ˛-module of rank
one, and so the centralizer of ˛ in G is F2 Œ˛ \ G D h˛i. Thus jCG .˛/j D 7, and the number
of elements in the conjugacy class of ˛ is 168=7 D 24. Case 6: Exactly the same as Case 5.
Case 4: Here V D V1 ˚ V2 as an F2 Œ˛-module, and
4-9 Since G=Z.G/ ,! Aut.G/, we see that G=Z.G/ is cyclic, and so by (4.19) that G is
commutative. If G is finite and not cyclic, it has a factor Cpr Cps etc..
4-10 Clearly .ij / D .1j /.1i /.1j /. Hence any subgroup containing .12/; .13/; : : : contains
all transpositions, and we know Sn is generated by transpositions.
4-11 Note that CG .x/ \ H D CH .x/, and so H=CH .x/ H CG .x/=CG .x//. Prove each
class has the same number c of elements. Then
4-12 (a) The first equivalence follows from the preceding problem. For the second, note that
commutes with all cycles in its decomposition, and so they must be even (i.e., have odd
length); if two cycles have the same odd length k, one can find a product of k transpositions
which interchanges them, and commutes with ; conversely, show that if the partition of n
defined by consists of distinct integers, then commutes only with the group generated by
the cycles in its cycle decomposition. (b) List of conjugacy classes in S7 , their size, parity,
and (when the parity is even) whether it splits in A7 .
4-14 Since Stab.gx0 / D g Stab.x0 /g 1 , if H Stab.x0 / then H Stab.x/ for all x, and
so H D 1, contrary to hypothesis. Now Stab.x0 / is maximal, and so H Stab.x0 / D G,
which shows that H acts transitively.
5-1 Let p be a prime dividing jGj and let P be a Sylow p-subgroup, of order p m say. The
elements of P all have order dividing p m , and it has at most
pm 1
1 C p C C pm 1
D < pm
p 1
6-2 No, D4 and the quaternion group have isomorphic commutator subgroups and quotient
groups but are not isomorphic. Similarly, Sn and An C2 are not isomorphic when n 5.
A PPENDIX C
Two-Hour Examination
1. Which of the following statements are true (give brief justifications for each of (a), (b),
(c), (d); give a correct set of implications for (e)).
(a) If a and b are elements of a group, then a2 D 1; b 3 D 1 H) .ab/6 D 1.
(b) The following two elements are conjugate in S7 :
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
; :
3 4 5 6 7 2 1 2 3 1 5 6 7 4
2. How many Sylow 11-subgroups can a group of order 110 D 2 5 11 have? Classify the
groups of order 110 containing a subgroup of order 10. Must every group of order 110
contain a subgroup of order 10?
3. Let G be a finite nilpotent group. Show that if every commutative quotient of G is cyclic,
then G itself is cyclic. Is the statement true for nonnilpotent groups?
6. (a) Describe the group with generators x and y and defining relation yxy 1 D x 1 .
(b) Describe the group with generators x and y and defining relations yxy 1 D x 1,
xyx 1 D y 1 .
You may use results proved in class or in the notes, but you should indicate clearly what you
are using.
129
130 C. T WO -H OUR E XAMINATION
S OLUTIONS
1. (a) False: in ha; bja2 ; b 3 i, ab has infinite order.
(b) True, the cycle decompositions are (1357)(246), (123)(4567).
(c) True, use the Krull-Schmidt theorem.
(d) False, the group it generates is proper.
(e) Cyclic H) commutative H) nilpotent H) solvable.
2. The number of Sylow 11-subgroups s11 D 1; 12; : : : and divides 10. Hence there is only
one Sylow 11-subgroup P . Have
G D P Ì H; P D C11 ; H D C10 or D5 :
Now have to look at the maps W H ! Aut.C11 / D C10 . Yes, by the Schur-Zassenhaus
lemma.
4. (a) If gx D x, then ghx D hgx D hx. Hence g fixes every element of X, and so g D 1.
Fix an x 2 X; then g 7! gx W G ! X is injective. [Note that Cayley’s theorem gives an
embedding G ,! Sn , n D .G W 1/.]
(b) Partition the set into subsets of order 3, and let G D G1 Gm .
(c) Let O1 ; : : : ; Or be the orbits of G, and let Gi be the image of G in Sym.Oi /. Then
G ,! G1 Gr , and so (by induction),
n1 nr n
.G W 1/ .G1 W 1/ .Gr W 1/ 3 3 3 3 D 33 :
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62:565–583.
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Cambridge.
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of Mathematicians, Vol. 1, 2 (Zürich, 1994), pp. 17–24, Basel. Birkhäuser.
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Index
centralizer G-map, 58
of element, 59 G-set, 57
of subgroup, 117 generates, 13
centralizer, of a subalgebra, 106 generators
centre of a group, 35
of a group, 12 GLn .F /, 10
class group, 7
nilpotency, 91 4-, 14
class equation A-, 94
class, 62 abelian, 9
Cm , 9 additive, 7
alternating, 65
133
134 I NDEX
Burnside, 38 of a subgroup, 17
commutative, 9 invariant factors, 26
complete, 44 inverse, 8
Coxeter, 38 inversion, of a permutation, 64
cyclic, 13 isomorphism
dihedral, 13 of G-sets, 58
finite reflection, 39 of groups, 8, 16
finitely presented, 37
free, 33 kernel, 20
free abelian, 35 Klein Viergruppe, 14
general linear, 10
length
indecomposable, 96
of a subnormal series, 85
isotropy, 59
solvable, 90
metabelian, 91
length of a cycle, 66
metacyclic, 119
multiplicative, 7 map, of G-sets, 58
nilpotent, 91 module
of rigid motions, 58 semisimple, 99
of symmetries, 9 simple, 99
orthogonal, 10 monoid
p, 8 free, 31
permutation, 9
primitive, 72 negative, 8
quaternion, 14 normalizer
generalized, 35 of a subgroup, 60
quotient, 21
reflection, 39 opposite algebra, 99
simple, 19 orbit, 58
soluble, 88 order
solvable, 70, 88 of a group, 8
special linear, 20 of an element, 9
symplectic, 10
with operators, 94 partition
group. of a natural number, 67
factor, 21 stabilized, 71
groups permutation
of order 12, 81 even, 64
of order 2m p n , m 3., 82 odd, 64
of order 2p, 62 presentation
of order 30, 80 of a group, 35
of order 60, 82 problem
of order 99, 80 Burnside, 37
of order p, 18 restricted Burnside, 38
of order p 2 , 63 word, 37
of order p 3 , 81 product
of order pq, 80 direct, 9, 23
of small order, 15 knit, 50
semidirect, 46
homogeneous, 59 Zappa-Szép, 50
homomorphism projector, 102
admissible, 94
normal, 54 quotients, of a normal series
of groups, 16 of a normal series, 85
index rank
Index 135
table
multiplication, 11
theorem
Cauchy, 62
Cayley, 16
centre of a p-group, 63
commutative groups have bases, 25
correspondence, 22