Intermediately subnormal-to-normal subgroup: Difference between revisions
m (2 revisions) |
No edit summary |
||
| (10 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
===Symbol-free definition=== | ===Symbol-free definition=== | ||
A [[subgroup]] of a [[group]] is termed '''intermediately subnormal-to-normal''' if | A [[subgroup]] of a [[group]] is termed '''intermediately subnormal-to-normal''' if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions: | ||
# Whenever it is [[defining ingredient::subnormal subgroup|subnormal]] in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also [[defining ingredient::normal subgroup|normal]] in that intermediate subgroup. | |||
# Whenever it is [[defining ingredient::2-subnormal subgroup|2-subnormal]] in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also [[defining ingredient::normal subgroup|normal]] in that intermediate subgroup. | |||
# In any intermediate subgroup, it is a [[defining ingredient::subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer]]. In other words, its [[defining ingredient::normalizer of a subgroup|normalizer]] in any intermediate subgroup is a [[defining ingredient::self-normalizing subgroup]]. | |||
# It has a [[defining ingredient::subnormalizer]], and the subnormalizer is equal to the normalizer. | |||
# Whenever it is [[defining ingredient::ascendant subgroup|ascendant]] in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also [[defining ingredient::normal subgroup|normal]] in that intermediate subgroup. | |||
# Whenever it is [[defining ingredient::hypernormalized subgroup|hypernormalized]] in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also [[defining ingredient::normal subgroup|normal]] in that intermediate subgroup. | |||
===Equivalence of definitions=== | |||
{{further|[[Equivalence of definitions of intermediately subnormal-to-normal subgroup]]}} | |||
==Formalisms== | ==Formalisms== | ||
{{obtainedbyapplyingthe|intermediately operator|subnormal-to-normal subgroup}} | {{obtainedbyapplyingthe|intermediately operator|subnormal-to-normal subgroup}} | ||
{{obtainedbyapplyingthe|intermediately operator|subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer}} | |||
==Relation with other properties== | ==Relation with other properties== | ||
| Line 17: | Line 30: | ||
===Stronger properties=== | ===Stronger properties=== | ||
* [[Normal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Normal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Abnormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Abnormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Weakly abnormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Weakly abnormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Pronormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Pronormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Weakly pronormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Weakly pronormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Paranormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Paranormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Polynormal subgroup]] | * [[Weaker than::Polynormal subgroup]] | ||
* [[Intermediately | * [[Weaker than::Intermediately normal-to-characteristic subgroup]]: {{proofat|[[Intermediately normal-to-characteristic implies intermediately subnormal-to-normal]]}} | ||
* [[Weaker than::Self-normalizing subgroup]]: {{proofat|[[Self-normalizing implies intermediately subnormal-to-normal]]}} | |||
* [[Weaker than::Image-closed intermediately subnormal-to-normal subgroup]] | |||
===Weaker properties=== | ===Weaker properties=== | ||
* [[Subnormal-to-normal subgroup]] | * [[Stronger than::Subgroup having a subnormalizer]] | ||
* [[Stronger than::Subnormal-to-normal subgroup]] | |||
* [[Stronger than::Subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer]]: {{proofat|[[Normalizer of intermediately subnormal-to-normal implies self-normalizing]]}} | |||
==Metaproperties== | ==Metaproperties== | ||
| Line 35: | Line 52: | ||
If <math>H</math> is intermediately subnormal-to-normal in <math>G</math>, it is also intermediately subnormal-to-normal in any intermediate subgroup <math>K</math>. | If <math>H</math> is intermediately subnormal-to-normal in <math>G</math>, it is also intermediately subnormal-to-normal in any intermediate subgroup <math>K</math>. | ||
==References== | |||
* {{paperlink|KurdachenkoSubbotin}}: In this page, the term ''transitively normal'' is used for this concept. Note that [[transitively normal subgroup]] means something different on this wiki. | |||
Latest revision as of 20:54, 28 February 2009
This article defines a subgroup property: a property that can be evaluated to true/false given a group and a subgroup thereof, invariant under subgroup equivalence. View a complete list of subgroup properties[SHOW MORE]
BEWARE! This term is nonstandard and is being used locally within the wiki. [SHOW MORE]
Definition
Symbol-free definition
A subgroup of a group is termed intermediately subnormal-to-normal if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:
- Whenever it is subnormal in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also normal in that intermediate subgroup.
- Whenever it is 2-subnormal in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also normal in that intermediate subgroup.
- In any intermediate subgroup, it is a subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer. In other words, its normalizer in any intermediate subgroup is a self-normalizing subgroup.
- It has a subnormalizer, and the subnormalizer is equal to the normalizer.
- Whenever it is ascendant in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also normal in that intermediate subgroup.
- Whenever it is hypernormalized in any intermediate subgroup, then it is also normal in that intermediate subgroup.
Equivalence of definitions
Further information: Equivalence of definitions of intermediately subnormal-to-normal subgroup
Formalisms
In terms of the intermediately operator
This property is obtained by applying the intermediately operator to the property: subnormal-to-normal subgroup
View other properties obtained by applying the intermediately operator
In terms of the intermediately operator
This property is obtained by applying the intermediately operator to the property: subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer
View other properties obtained by applying the intermediately operator
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
- Normal subgroup
- Abnormal subgroup
- Weakly abnormal subgroup
- Pronormal subgroup
- Weakly pronormal subgroup
- Paranormal subgroup
- Polynormal subgroup
- Intermediately normal-to-characteristic subgroup: For full proof, refer: Intermediately normal-to-characteristic implies intermediately subnormal-to-normal
- Self-normalizing subgroup: For full proof, refer: Self-normalizing implies intermediately subnormal-to-normal
- Image-closed intermediately subnormal-to-normal subgroup
Weaker properties
- Subgroup having a subnormalizer
- Subnormal-to-normal subgroup
- Subgroup with self-normalizing normalizer: For full proof, refer: Normalizer of intermediately subnormal-to-normal implies self-normalizing
Metaproperties
Intermediate subgroup condition
YES: This subgroup property satisfies the intermediate subgroup condition: if a subgroup has the property in the whole group, it has the property in every intermediate subgroup.
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View variations of this property not satisfying intermediate subgroup condition
ABOUT INTERMEDIATE SUBROUP CONDITION:View all properties satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View facts about intermediate subgroup condition
If is intermediately subnormal-to-normal in , it is also intermediately subnormal-to-normal in any intermediate subgroup .
References
- Transitivity of normality and pronormal subgroups by L. A. Kurdachenko and I. Ya. Subbotin, Combinatorial group theory, discrete groups, and number theory, Volume 421, Page 201 - 210(Year 2006): More info: In this page, the term transitively normal is used for this concept. Note that transitively normal subgroup means something different on this wiki.