Invariance property

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BEWARE! This term is nonstandard and is being used locally within the wiki. [SHOW MORE]

This article defines a subgroup metaproperty: a property that can be evaluated to true/false for any subgroup property
View a complete list of subgroup metaproperties
View subgroup properties satisfying this metaproperty| View subgroup properties dissatisfying this metaproperty
VIEW RELATED: subgroup metaproperty satisfactions| subgroup metaproperty dissatisfactions

This article is about a general term. A list of important particular cases (instances) is available at Category:Invariance properties

History

The term invariant subgroup was first used for normal subgroups, because normality can be characterized as the invariance property with respect to inner automorphisms. Later, when Frobenius considered the concept of characteristic subgroup, he wanted to name it invariant subgroup but refrained from doing so because the term was in vogue for normal subgroup. Other notions of strictly invariant subgroup and fully invariant subgroup were also considered.

Although in the precise sense in which we are using here, the term invariance property is nonstandard, it has been used in similar sense in various standard texts.

Definition

Symbol-free definition

A subgroup property p is termed an invariance property if, for any group, there is a collection of functions from the group to itself such that a subgroup of the group satisfies property p if and only if it is invariant under all the functions in the collection.

Definition with symbols

A subgroup property p is termed an invariance property if, for any group G, there is a collection F of functions such that a subgroup H of G satisfies p if and only if H is invariant under all functions f in F.

In terms of the invariant subgroup operator

An invariance property is precisely a property that is obtained by applying the invariant subgroup operator to a function property.

In terms of the function restriction formalism

The invariance property with respect to a function property q is, in the function restriction formalism, expressible as:

q function

In other words, every function on the whole group satisfying property q restricts to a function on the subgroup.

Examples

Subgroup property Function property for which it is the invariance property Function restriction expression Further comments
normal subgroup inner automorphism inner automorphism function Normality is an auto-invariance property since being an inner automorphism is a group-closed automorphism property. In other words, we can write it as inner automorphism automorphism. This is a right tight function restriction expression (i.e., we cannot make the right side stronger than automorphism); see inner automorphism to automorphism is right tight for normality.
characteristic subgroup automorphism automorphism function Characteristicity is an auto-invariance property since being an automorphism is a group-closed automorphism property. In other words, we can write it as automorphism automorphism. This also shows that it is a balanced subgroup property.
fully invariant subgroup endomorphism endomorphism function Full invariance is an endo-invariance property. In other words, we can write it as endomorphism endomorphism. This also shows that it is a balanced subgroup property.
powering-invariant subgroup rational power map rational power map function It can also be written as rational power map rational power map, and hence is a balanced subgroup property.
local powering-invariant subgroup local powering local powering function It can also be written as local powering local powering, and hence is a balanced subgroup property.

Relation with other metaproperties

Stronger metaproperties

Property Meaning Proof of implication Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) Intermediate notions
endo-invariance property invariance property with respect to a function property that is satisfied only by endomorphisms (by definition)
auto-invariance property invariance property with respect to a group-closed automorphism property (by definition) |FULL LIST, MORE INFO

Weaker metaproperties

Property Meaning Proof of implication Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) Intermediate notions
multi-invariance property invariance property with respect to a collection of functions of potentially varying arities set all functions to have arity 1
strongly intersection-closed subgroup property closed under arbitrary intersections including the empty intersection (whole group) invariance implies strongly intersection-closed strongly intersection-closed not implies invariance
intersection-closed subgroup property closed under arbitrary intersections but not including the empty intersection (via strongly intersection-closed) (via strongly intersection-closed)
identity-true subgroup property true for any group as a subgroup of itself (by definition) any identity-true property that is not intersection-closed will suffice; for instance, the property of having odd index, or having index at most 2
union-closed subgroup property closed under union, if the union also happens to be a subgroup similar proof as for intersection-closed
ACU-closed subgroup property closed under unions of ascending chains of subgroups (via union-closed) |FULL LIST, MORE INFO

Weaker metaproperties (subject to further conditions)

Below, we denote by q the function property and by p the invariance property.

Transitivity

A subgroup property is said to be transitive if whenever G has the property as a subgroup of H and H has the property as a subgroup of K, then G also has the property as a subgroup of K. To determine whether an invariance property is transitive, we can use the technique of right tightening. The following turn out to be true:

  • The property of being normal is not transitive. In fact, its left transiter is the property of being characteristic.
  • The property of being characteristic is transitive.
  • The property of being strictly characteristic is not transitive.
  • The property of being fully invariant is transitive.