Glossary of group theory
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/99/Wiktionary-logo-en-v2.svg/40px-Wiktionary-logo-en-v2.svg.png)
Look up
Appendix:Glossary of group theory in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
A group is a set together with an associative operation that admits an identity element and such that there exists an inverse for every element.
Throughout this glossary, we use e to denote the identity element of a group.
A
abelian group
A group (G, •) is
abelian if • is commutative, i.e. g • h = h • g for all g, h ∈ G. Likewise, a group is nonabelian if this relation fails to hold for any pair g, h ∈ G.
ascendant subgroup
A
subgroup H of a group G is
ascendant if there is an ascending
subgroup series starting from H and ending at G, such that every term in the series is a
normal subgroup of its successor. The series may be infinite. If the series is finite, then the subgroup is
subnormal.
automorphism
An
automorphism of a group is an
isomorphism of the group to itself.
C
center of a group
The
center of a group G, denoted Z(G), is the set of those group elements that commute with all elements of G, that is, the set of all h ∈ G such that hg = gh for all g ∈ G. Z(G) is always a
normal subgroup of G. A group G is
abelian if and only if Z(G) = G.
centerless group
A group G is centerless if its
center Z(G) is
trivial.
central subgroup
A
subgroup of a group is a
central subgroup of that group if it lies inside the
center of the group.
characteristic subgroup
A
subgroup of a group is a
characteristic subgroup of that group if it is mapped to itself by every
automorphism of the parent group.
characteristically simple group
A group is said to be
characteristically simple if it has no proper nontrivial
characteristic subgroups.
class function
A
class function on a group G is a function that it is constant on the
conjugacy classes of G.
class number
The
class number of a group is the number of its
conjugacy classes.
commutator
The
commutator of two elements g and h of a group G is the element = g−1h−1gh. Some authors define the commutator as = ghg−1h−1 instead. The commutator of two elements g and h is equal to the group's identity if and only if g and h commutate, that is, if and only if gh = hg.
commutator subgroup
The
commutator subgroup or derived subgroup of a group is the subgroup
generated by all the
commutators of the group.
composition series
A
composition series of a group G is a
subnormal series of finite length
1
=
H
0
◃
H
1
◃
⋯
◃
H
n
=
G
,
{\displaystyle 1=H_{0}\triangleleft H_{1}\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft H_{n}=G,}
![{\displaystyle 1=H_{0}\triangleleft H_{1}\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft H_{n}=G,}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/fed70241b071404c74a310da0e1f00816ad6b26b)
with strict inclusions, such that each Hi is a maximal strict
normal subgroup of Hi+1. Equivalently, a composition series is a subnormal series such that each
factor group Hi+1 / Hi is
simple. The factor groups are called composition factors.
conjugacy-closed subgroup
A
subgroup of a group is said to be
conjugacy-closed if any two elements of the subgroup that are
conjugate in the group are also conjugate in the subgroup.
conjugacy class
The
conjugacy classes of a group G are those subsets of G containing group elements that are
conjugate with each other.
conjugate elements
Two elements x and y of a group G are
conjugate if there exists an element g ∈ G such that g−1xg = y. The element g−1xg, denoted xg, is called the conjugate of x by g. Some authors define the conjugate of x by g as gxg−1. This is often denoted gx. Conjugacy is an
equivalence relation. Its
equivalence classes are called
conjugacy classes.
conjugate subgroups
Two subgroups H1 and H2 of a group G are
conjugate subgroups if there is a g ∈ G such that gH1g−1 = H2.
contranormal subgroup
A
subgroup of a group G is a
contranormal subgroup of G if its
normal closure is G itself.
cyclic group
A
cyclic group is a group that is
generated by a single element, that is, a group such that there is an element g in the group such that every other element of the group may be obtained by repeatedly applying the group operation to g or its inverse.
D
derived subgroup
Synonym for
commutator subgroup.
direct product
The
direct product of two groups G and H, denoted G × H, is the
cartesian product of the underlying sets of G and H, equipped with a component-wise defined binary operation (g1, h1) · (g2, h2) = (g1 ⋅ g2, h1 ⋅ h2). With this operation, G × H itself forms a group.
F
factor group
Synonym for
quotient group.
FC-group
A group is an
FC-group if every
conjugacy class of its elements has finite cardinality.
finite group
A
finite group is a group of finite
order, that is, a group with a finite number of elements.
finitely generated group
A group G is
finitely generated if there is a finite
generating set, that is, if there is a finite set S of elements of G such that every element of G can be written as the combination of finitely many elements of S and of inverses of elements of S.
G
generating set
A
generating set of a group G is a subset S of G such that every element of G can be expressed as a combination (under the group operation) of finitely many elements of S and inverses of elements of S. Given a subset S of G. We denote by ⟨S⟩ the smallest subgroup of G containing S. ⟨S⟩ is called the subgroup of G generated by S.
group automorphism
See
automorphism.
group homomorphism
See
homomorphism.
group isomorphism
See
isomorphism.
H
homomorphism
Given two groups (G, •) and (H, ·), a
homomorphism from G to H is a
function h : G → H such that for all a and b in G, h(a • b) = h(a) · h(b).
I
index of a subgroup
The
index of a
subgroup H of a group G, denoted |G : H| or or (G : H), is the number of
cosets of H in G. For a
normal subgroup N of a group G, the index of N in G is equal to the
order of the
quotient group G / N. For a
finite subgroup H of a finite group G, the index of H in G is equal to the quotient of the orders of G and H.
isomorphism
Given two groups (G, •) and (H, ·), an
isomorphism between G and H is a
bijective homomorphism from G to H, that is, a one-to-one correspondence between the elements of the groups in a way that respects the given group operations. Two groups are isomorphic if there exists a group isomorphism mapping from one to the other. Isomorphic groups can be thought of as essentially the same, only with different labels on the individual elements.
L
lattice of subgroups
The
lattice of subgroups of a group is the
lattice defined by its
subgroups,
partially ordered by
set inclusion.
locally cyclic group
A group is
locally cyclic if every
finitely generated subgroup is
cyclic. Every cyclic group is locally cyclic, and every
finitely-generated locally cyclic group is cyclic. Every locally cyclic group is
abelian. Every
subgroup, every
quotient group and every
homomorphic image of a locally cyclic group is locally cyclic.
N
normal closure
The
normal closure of a subset S of a group G is the intersection of all
normal subgroups of G that contain S.
normal core
The
normal core of a
subgroup H of a group G is the largest
normal subgroup of G that is contained in H.
normalizer
For a subset S of a group G, the
normalizer of S in G, denoted NG(S), is the subgroup of G defined by
N
G
(
S
)
=
{
g
∈
G
∣
g
S
=
S
g
}
.
{\displaystyle \mathrm {N} _{G}(S)=\{g\in G\mid gS=Sg\}.}
![{\displaystyle \mathrm {N} _{G}(S)=\{g\in G\mid gS=Sg\}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/038ee9ce297092d8ad882e97a4a2e3cdd2f4f3ad)
normal series
A
normal series of a group G is a sequence of
normal subgroups of G such that each element of the sequence is a normal subgroup of the next element:
1
=
A
0
◃
A
1
◃
⋯
◃
A
n
=
G
{\displaystyle 1=A_{0}\triangleleft A_{1}\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft A_{n}=G}
![{\displaystyle 1=A_{0}\triangleleft A_{1}\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft A_{n}=G}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/6e9db9ae4c211193cfb9db08a0f9bb4175a96fcf)
with
A
i
◃
G
{\displaystyle A_{i}\triangleleft G}
![{\displaystyle A_{i}\triangleleft G}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/aef32fe22faef5e4be2c5f65a930f0a61ebee7de)
.
normal subgroup
A
subgroup N of a group G is
normal in G (denoted N ◅ G if the
conjugation of an element n of N by an element g of G is always in N, that is, if for all g ∈ G and n ∈ N, gng−1 ∈ N. A normal subgroup N of a group G can be used to construct the
quotient group G / N.
no small subgroup
A
topological group has
no small subgroup if there exists a neighborhood of the identity element that does not contain any nontrivial subgroup.
O
orbit
Consider a group G acting on a set X. The
orbit of an element x in X is the set of elements in X to which x can be moved by the elements of G. The orbit of x is denoted by G ⋅ x
order of a group
The
order of a group (G, •) is the
cardinality (i.e. number of elements) of G. A group with finite order is called a
finite group.
order of a group element
The
order of an element g of a group G is the smallest
positive integer n such that gn = e. If no such integer exists, then the order of g is said to be infinite. The order of a finite group is
divisible by the order of every element.
P
perfect core
The
perfect core of a group is its largest
perfect subgroup.
perfect group
A
perfect group is a group that is equal to its own
commutator subgroup.
periodic group
A group is
periodic if every group element has finite
order. Every
finite group is periodic.
permutation group
A
permutation group is a group whose elements are
permutations of a given
set M (the
bijective functions from set M to itself) and whose
group operation is the
composition of those permutations. The group consisting of all permutations of a set M is the
symmetric group of M.
p-group
If p is a
prime number, then a
p-group is one in which the order of every element is a power of p. A finite group is a p-group if and only if the
order of the group is a power of p.
p-subgroup
A
subgroup that is also a
p-group. The study of p-subgroups is the central object of the
Sylow theorems.
Q
quotient group
Given a group G and a
normal subgroup N of G, the
quotient group is the set G / N of
left cosets {aN : a ∈ G} together with the operation aN • bN = abN. The relationship between normal subgroups, homomorphisms, and factor groups is summed up in the
fundamental theorem on homomorphisms.
R
real element
An element g of a group G is called a
real element of G if it belongs to the same
conjugacy class as its inverse, that is, if there is a h in G with gh = g−1, where gh is defined as h−1gh. An element of a group G is real if and only if for all
representations of G the
trace of the corresponding matrix is a real number.
S
serial subgroup
A
subgroup H of a group G is a
serial subgroup of G if there is a chain C of subgroups of G from H to G such that for each pair of consecutive subgroups X and Y in C, X is a
normal subgroup of Y. If the chain is finite, then H is a
subnormal subgroup of G.
simple group
A
simple group is a
nontrivial group whose only
normal subgroups are the trivial group and the group itself.
subgroup
A
subgroup of a group G is a
subset H of the elements of G that itself forms a group when equipped with the restriction of the
group operation of G to H × H. A subset H of a group G is a subgroup of G if and only if it is nonempty and
closed under products and inverses, that is, if and only if for every a and b in H, ab and a−1 are also in H.
subgroup series
A
subgroup series of a group G is a sequence of
subgroups of G such that each element in the series is a subgroup of the next element:
1
=
A
0
≤
A
1
≤
⋯
≤
A
n
=
G
.
{\displaystyle 1=A_{0}\leq A_{1}\leq \cdots \leq A_{n}=G.}
![{\displaystyle 1=A_{0}\leq A_{1}\leq \cdots \leq A_{n}=G.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/1d4ee117c021e508ea35f3cf7b1e65ea4adf7ff5)
subnormal subgroup
A
subgroup H of a group G is a
subnormal subgroup of G if there is a finite chain of subgroups of the group, each one
normal in the next, beginning at H and ending at G.
symmetric group
Given a set M, the
symmetric group of M is the set of all
permutations of M (the set all
bijective functions from M to M) with the
composition of the permutations as group operation. The symmetric group of a
finite set of size n is denoted Sn. (The symmetric groups of any two sets of the same size are
isomorphic.)
T
torsion group
Synonym for
periodic group.
transitively normal subgroup
A
subgroup of a group is said to be
transitively normal in the group if every
normal subgroup of the subgroup is also normal in the whole group.
trivial group
A
trivial group is a group consisting of a single element, namely the identity element of the group. All such groups are
isomorphic, and one often speaks of the trivial group.
Basic definitions
Both subgroups and normal subgroups of a given group form a complete lattice under inclusion of subsets; this property and some related results are described by the lattice theorem.
Kernel of a group homomorphism. It is the preimage of the identity in the codomain of a group homomorphism. Every normal subgroup is the kernel of a group homomorphism and vice versa.
Direct product, direct sum, and semidirect product of groups. These are ways of combining groups to construct new groups; please refer to the corresponding links for explanation.
Types of groups
Finitely generated group. If there exists a finite set S such that ⟨S⟩ = G, then G is said to be finitely generated. If S can be taken to have just one element, G is a cyclic group of finite order, an infinite cyclic group, or possibly a group {e} with just one element.
Simple group. Simple groups are those groups having only e and themselves as normal subgroups. The name is misleading because a simple group can in fact be very complex. An example is the monster group, whose order is about 1054. Every finite group is built up from simple groups via group extensions, so the study of finite simple groups is central to the study of all finite groups. The finite simple groups are known and classified.
The structure of any finite abelian group is relatively simple; every finite abelian group is the direct sum of cyclic p-groups.
This can be extended to a complete classification of all finitely generated abelian groups, that is all abelian groups that are generated by a finite set.
The situation is much more complicated for the non-abelian groups.
Free group. Given any set A, one can define a group as the smallest group containing the free semigroup of A. The group consists of the finite strings (words) that can be composed by elements from A, together with other elements that are necessary to form a group. Multiplication of strings is defined by concatenation, for instance (abb) • (bca) = abbbca.
Every group (G, •) is basically a factor group of a free group generated by G. Refer to Presentation of a group for more explanation.
One can then ask algorithmic questions about these presentations, such as:
- Do these two presentations specify isomorphic groups?; or
- Does this presentation specify the trivial group?
The general case of this is the word problem, and several of these questions are in fact unsolvable by any general algorithm.
General linear group, denoted by GL(n, F), is the group of n-by-n invertible matrices, where the elements of the matrices are taken from a field F such as the real numbers or the complex numbers.
Group representation (not to be confused with the presentation of a group). A group representation is a homomorphism from a group to a general linear group. One basically tries to "represent" a given abstract group as a concrete group of invertible matrices, which is much easier to study.
See also