4.6 KiB
Math4302 Modern Algebra (Lecture 9)
Groups
Non-cyclic groups
Dihedral groups
The dihedral group D_n is the group of symmetries of a regular $n$-gon.
(Permutation that sends adjacent vertices to adjacent vertices)
D_n<S_n
|S_n|=n!, |D_n|=2n
We can classify dihedral groups as follows:
\rho \in D_n as the rotation of a regular $n$-gon by \frac{2\pi}{n}.
\phi\in D_n as a reflection of a regular $n$-gon with respect to $x$-axis.
We can enumerate the elements of D_n as follows:
D_n=\langle \phi,\rho\rangle=\{e,\rho,\rho^2,\cdots,\rho^{n-1},\phi,\phi\rho,\phi\rho^2,\cdots,\phi\rho^{n-1}\}
We claim these elements are all distinct.
Proof
Consider the first half, clearly \rho_i\neq \rho_j if 0\leq i<j\leq n-1.
Also \phi\rho_i\neq \phi\rho_j if 0\leq i<j\leq n-1. otherwise \rho_i=\rho_j
Also \rho^i\neq \rho^j\phi where 0\leq i,j\leq n-1.
Otherwise \rho^{i-j}=\phi, but reflection (with some point fixed) cannot be any rotation (no points are fixed).
In D_n, \phi\rho=\rho^{n-1}\phi, more generally, \phi\rho^i=\rho^{n-i}\phi for any i\in\mathbb{Z}.
Group homomorphism
Definition for group homomorphism
Let G,G' be groups.
\phi:G\to G' is called a group homomorphism if \phi(g_1g_2)=\phi(g_1)\phi(g_2) for all g_1,g_2\in G (Note that \phi may not be bijective).
This is a weaker condition than isomorphism.
Example
GL(2,\mathbb{R})=\{A\in M_{2\times 2}(\mathbb{R})|det(A)\neq 0\}
Then \phi:GL(2,\mathbb{R})\to (\mathbb{R}-\{0\},\cdot) where \phi(A)=\det(A) is a group homomorphism, since \det(AB)=\det(A)\det(B).
This is not one-to-one but onto, therefore not an isomorphism.
(\mathbb{Z}_n,+) and D_n has homomorphism (\mathbb{Z}_n,+)\to D_n where \phi(k)=\rho^k
\phi(i+j)=\rho^{i+j\mod n}=\rho^i\rho^j=\phi(i)+\phi(j).
This is not onto but one-to-one, therefore not an isomorphism.
Let G,G' be two groups, let e be the identity of G and let e' be the identity of G'.
Let \phi:G\to G', \phi(a)=e' for all a\in G.
This is a group homomorphism,
\phi(ab)=\phi(a)\phi(b)=e'e'=e'
This is generally not onto and not one-to-one, therefore not an isomorphism.
Corollary for group homomorphism
Let G,G' be groups and \phi:G\to G' be a group homomorphism. e is the identity of G and e' is the identity of G'.
\phi(e)=e'\phi(a^{-1})=(\phi(a))^{-1}for alla\in G- If
H\leq G, then\phi(H)\leq G', where\phi(H)=\{\phi(a)|a\in H\}. - If
K\leq G'then\phi^{-1}(K)\leq G, where\phi^{-1}(K)=\{a\in G|\phi(a)\in K\}.
Proof
(1) \phi(e)=e'
Consider \phi(ee)=\phi(e)\phi(e), therefore \phi(e)=e' by cancellation on the left.
(2) \phi(a^{-1})=(\phi(a))^{-1}
Consider \phi(a^{-1}a)=\phi(a^{-1})\phi(a)=\phi(e), therefore \phi(a^{-1}) is the inverse of \phi(a) in G'.
(3) If H\leq G, then \phi(H)\leq G', where \phi(H)=\{\phi(a)|a\in H\}.
e\in Himplies thate'=\phi(e)\in\phi(H).- If
x\in \phi(H), thenx=\phi(a)for somea\in H. Sox^{-1}=(\phi(x))^{-1}=\phi(x^{-1})\in\phi(H). Butx\in H, sox^{-1}\in H, thereforex^{-1}\in\phi(H). - If
x,y\in \phi(H), thenx,y=\phi(a),\phi(b)for somea,b\in H. Soxy=\phi(a)\phi(b)=\phi(ab)\in\phi(H)(by homomorphism). Sinceab\in H,xy\in\phi(H).
(4) If K\leq G' then \phi^{-1}(K)\leq G, where \phi^{-1}(K)=\{a\in G|\phi(a)\in K\}.
e'\in Kimplies thate=\phi^{-1}(e')\in\phi^{-1}(K).- If
x\in \phi^{-1}(K), thenx=\phi(a)for somea\in G. Sox^{-1}=(\phi(x))^{-1}=\phi(x^{-1})\in\phi^{-1}(K). Butx\in G, sox^{-1}\in G, thereforex^{-1}\in\phi^{-1}(K). - If
x,y\in \phi^{-1}(K), thenx,y=\phi(a),\phi(b)for somea,b\in G. Soxy=\phi(a)\phi(b)=\phi(ab)\in\phi^{-1}(K)(by homomorphism). Sinceab\in G,xy\in\phi^{-1}(K).
Definition for kernel and image of a group homomorphism
Let G,G' be groups and \phi:G\to G' be a group homomorphism.
\operatorname{ker}(\phi)=\{a\in G|\phi(a)=e'\}=\phi^{-1}(\{e'\}) is called the kernel of \phi.
Facts:
\operatorname{ker}(\phi)is a subgroup ofG. (proof by previous corollary (4))\phiis onto if and only if\operatorname{ker}(\phi)=\{e\}(the trivial subgroup ofG). (proof forward, by definition of one-to-one; backward, if\phi(a)=\phi(b), then\phi(a)\phi(b)^{-1}=e', so\phi(a)\phi(b^{-1})=e', soab^{-1}=e, soa,b=e, soa=b)