Right coset of a subgroup

Definition with symbols
Let $$H$$ be a subgroup of a group $$G$$. Then, a right coset of $$H$$ is a nonempty subset $$S \subset G$$ satisfying the following equivalent properties:


 * 1) $$xy^{-1}$$ is in $$H$$ for any $$x$$ and $$y$$ in $$S$$, and for any fixed $$y$$, the map $$x \mapsto xy^{-1}$$ is a surjection from $$S$$ to $$H$$
 * 2) There exists a $$g$$ in $$G$$ such that $$S = Hg$$
 * 3) For any $$x$$ in $$S$$, $$S = Hx$$
 * 4) $$S$$ is an orbit in $$G$$ under the action of $$H$$ on $$G$$ by left multiplication

Right congruence
The right cosets of a subgroup are pairwise disjoint, and hence form a partition of the group. The relation of being in the same right coset is an equivalence relation on the group, and this equivalence relation is termed the right congruence induced by the subgroup.

Relation with left coset
Every subset that occurs as a right coset of a subgroup also occurs as a left coset. In fact, the right coset $$Hx$$ occurs as the left coset $$x(x^{-1}Hx)$$ with $$x^{-1}Hx$$ being the new subgroup.

Condition for a left coset to also be a right coset
For a given group $$H$$, a subset is both a left coset of $$H$$ and a right coset of $$H$$ if it is of the form $$xH$$ where $$x$$ is in the normalizer of $$H$$. In other words, the normalizer of a subgroup can be defined as the union of those subsets that are both left and right cosets of $$H$$.

Size of each right coset
Let $$H$$ be a subgroup of $$G$$ and $$x$$ be any element of $$G$$. Then, the map sending $$g$$ in $$H$$ to $$gx$$ is a bijection from $$H$$ to $$Hx$$.

Number of right cosets
The number of right cosets of a subgroup is termed the index of that subgroup.

Since all right cosets have the same size as the subgroup, we have a formula for the index of the subgroup when the whole group is finite: it is the ratio of the order of the group to the order of the subgroup.

This incidentally also proves Lagrange's theorem -- the order of any subgroup of a finite group divides the order of the whole group.

Natural isomorphism of left cosets with right cosets
There is a natural bijection between the set of left cosets of a subgroup and the set of right cosets of that subgroup. This bijection arises from the natural antiautomorphism of a group defined by the map sending each element to its inverse.