Normal subgroup: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Gareth Leng
(→‎External links: links policy)
imported>Richard Pinch
Line 24: Line 24:
A [[characteristic subgroup]] of a group is a subgroup which is invariant under all [[automorphism of a group|automorphisms]] of the whole group. Characteristic subgroups are normal, because normality requires invariance only under inner automorphisms, which are a particular kind of automorphism.
A [[characteristic subgroup]] of a group is a subgroup which is invariant under all [[automorphism of a group|automorphisms]] of the whole group. Characteristic subgroups are normal, because normality requires invariance only under inner automorphisms, which are a particular kind of automorphism.


In particular, subgroups like the [[center]], the [[commutator subgroup]], the [[Frattini subgroup]] are examples of characteristic, and hence normal, subgroups.
In particular, subgroups like the [[centre of a group|center]], the [[commutator subgroup]], the [[Frattini subgroup]] are examples of characteristic, and hence normal, subgroups.


===A smallest non-example===
===A smallest non-example===

Revision as of 17:17, 6 November 2008

This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Definition

A subgroup H of a group G is termed normal if the following equivalent conditions are satisfied:

  1. Given any and , we have
  2. H occurs as the kernel of a homomorphism from G. In other words, there is a homomorphism such that the inverse image of the identity element of K is H.
  3. Every inner automorphism of G sends H to within itself
  4. Every inner automorphism of G restricts to an automorphism of H

Some elementary examples and nonexamples

All subgroups in Abelian groups

In an Abelian group, every subgroup is normal. This is because if is an Abelian group, and , then .

More generally, any subgroup inside the center of a group is normal.

It is not, however, true that if every subgroup of a group is normal, then the group must be Abelian. A counterexample is the quaternion group.

All characteristic subgroups

A characteristic subgroup of a group is a subgroup which is invariant under all automorphisms of the whole group. Characteristic subgroups are normal, because normality requires invariance only under inner automorphisms, which are a particular kind of automorphism.

In particular, subgroups like the center, the commutator subgroup, the Frattini subgroup are examples of characteristic, and hence normal, subgroups.

A smallest non-example

The smallest example of a non-normal subgroup is a subgroup of order two in the symmetric group on three elements. Explicitly, we can take the cyclic subgroup of order two generated by the 2-cycle in the symmetric group of permutations on symbols .

External links