C-closed subgroup: Difference between revisions
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Alternative terminology for a centralizer subgroup is '''self-bicommutant subgroup''', '''self-bicentralizer subgroup''', and '''C-closed subgroup'''. | Alternative terminology for a centralizer subgroup is '''self-bicommutant subgroup''', '''self-bicentralizer subgroup''', and '''C-closed subgroup'''. | ||
==Metaproperties== | |||
{{intersection-closed}} | |||
An arbitrary intersection of centralizer subgroups is a centralizer subgroup; this follows from general facts about Galois correspondences. In fact, even an empty intersection of centralizer subgroups is a centralizer subgroups, so the property is actually [[strongly intersection-closed subgroup property|strongly intersection-closed]]. | |||
{{further|[[Galois correspondence-closed implies strongly intersection-closed]]}} | |||
Revision as of 21:46, 12 January 2008
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]
Definition
Symbol-free definition
A subgroup of a group is termed a centralizer subgroup if it occurs as the centralizer of a nonempty subset (or equivalently, of a subgroup).
Alternative terminology for a centralizer subgroup is self-bicommutant subgroup, self-bicentralizer subgroup, and C-closed subgroup.
Metaproperties
Intersection-closedness
YES: This subgroup property is intersection-closed: an arbitrary (nonempty) intersection of subgroups with this property, also has this property.
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property that are intersection-closed | View variations of this property that are not intersection-closed
ABOUT INTERSECTION-CLOSEDNESS: View all intersection-closed subgroup properties (or, strongly intersection-closed properties) | View all subgroup properties that are not intersection-closed | Read a survey article on proving intersection-closedness | Read a survey article on disproving intersection-closedness
An arbitrary intersection of centralizer subgroups is a centralizer subgroup; this follows from general facts about Galois correspondences. In fact, even an empty intersection of centralizer subgroups is a centralizer subgroups, so the property is actually strongly intersection-closed.
Further information: Galois correspondence-closed implies strongly intersection-closed