Product of subgroups: Difference between revisions

From Groupprops
No edit summary
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<section begin="beginner"/>
==Definition==
==Definition==


Let <math>G</math> be a [[group]] and <math>H,K</math> be [[subgroup]]s of <math>G</math>. Then the '''product''' of <math>H</math> and <math>K</math> is defined as the set of elements:
===Symbol-free definition===


<math>\{ hk | h \in H, k \in K \}</math>
The '''Product''' of two [[subgroup]]s of a group is the subset consiting of the pairwise products between the two subgroups.


The product need not in general be a subgroup. However, it is always contained in <math>\langle H, K \rangle</math>, which is the [[join of subgroups|join]] of <math>H</math> and <math>K</math>, or the subgroup generated by <math>H</math> and <math>K</math>.
===Definition with symbols===


The following are equivalent (but may not all in general be true):
The '''Product''' <math>HK</math> of two [[subgroup]]s <math>H</math> and <math>K</math> of a group <math>G</math> is:
 
<math>HK := \{ hk \mid h \in H, k \in K \}</math>.
 
If <math>G</math> is abelian and if the group operation is denoted as <math>+</math>, the ''product'' is termed the ''sum'', and is denoted <math>H + K</math>:
 
<math>H + K = \{ h + k \mid h \in H, k \in K \}</math>.
 
==Facts==
 
<math>HK</math> is the [[double coset]] <math>HeK</math>, <math>e</math> being the identity element of <math>G</math>.
 
The cardinality <math>\left| HK \right|</math> of <math>HK</math> is <math>\left| H \right| \left| K \right| / \left| H \cap K  \right|</math>.
 
The product <math>HK</math> is in general not a subgroup, because it may not be closed under the group operation.
 
The smallest subgroup containing <math>HK</math> is the [[join of subgroups|join]] <math>\langle H, K \rangle</math> of <math>H</math> and <math>K</math>, which is also the subgroup generated by <math>H</math> and <math>K</math>.
 
Following statements are equivalent:


* <math>HK</math> is a [[subgroup]]
* <math>HK</math> is a [[subgroup]]
Line 17: Line 34:


If the above equivalent conditions hold, <math>H</math> and <math>K</math> are termed [[permuting subgroups]].
If the above equivalent conditions hold, <math>H</math> and <math>K</math> are termed [[permuting subgroups]].
<section end="beginner"/>

Latest revision as of 13:24, 8 November 2023

Definition

Symbol-free definition

The Product of two subgroups of a group is the subset consiting of the pairwise products between the two subgroups.

Definition with symbols

The Product of two subgroups and of a group is:

.

If is abelian and if the group operation is denoted as , the product is termed the sum, and is denoted :

.

Facts

is the double coset , being the identity element of .

The cardinality of is .

The product is in general not a subgroup, because it may not be closed under the group operation.

The smallest subgroup containing is the join of and , which is also the subgroup generated by and .

Following statements are equivalent:

  • is a subgroup
  • , viz., it is precisely the join of and (the subgroup generated by and )

If the above equivalent conditions hold, and are termed permuting subgroups.