Marginal subgroup: Difference between revisions

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| [[center]] || [[commutator]] word <math>[x_1,x_2] = x_1x_2x_1^{-1}x_2^{-1}</math> (this is the left-normed commutator, but the same holds for the right-normed commutator) ||[[abelian group]]s
| [[center]] || [[commutator]] word <math>[x_1,x_2] = x_1x_2x_1^{-1}x_2^{-1}</math> (this is the left-normed commutator, but the same holds for the right-normed commutator) ||[[abelian group]]s
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| [[second center]] || <math>[[x_1,x_2],x_3]</math> || [[group of nilpotency class two|groups of nilpotency class at most two]]
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| finite <math>c^{th}</math> member of [[upper central series]] || <math>[\dots [x_1,x_2],x_3],\dots,x_{c+1}]</math> || [[nilpotent group]]s of class at most <math>c</math>
| finite <math>c^{th}</math> member of [[upper central series]] || <math>[\dots [x_1,x_2],x_3],\dots,x_{c+1}]</math> || [[nilpotent group]]s of class at most <math>c</math>
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| [[marginal subgroup for variety of metabelian groups]] || <math>[[x_1,x_2],[x_3,x_4]]</math> || [[metabelian group]]s, i.e., groups of derived length at most two
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Revision as of 17:54, 31 December 2011

Definition

Marginal subgroup for a single word

Suppose w is a word in the letters x1,x2,,xn and G is a group. The marginal subgroup for w in G is the set of all gG such that:

w(x1,x2,,xn)=w(x1,x2,,gxi,xi+1,xn)=w(x1,x2,,xig,xi+1,,xn)x1,x2,,xnG,i{1,2,,n}

That this set is a subgroup is readily verified.

Marginal subgroup for a collection of words

The marginal subgroup for a (possibly infinite) collection of words in a group is the intersection of the marginal subgroups for each of the words in that group.

Marginal subgroup for a variety

The marginal subgroup for a subvariety of the variety of groups is defined in the following equivalent ways:

  1. It is the marginal subgroup for the collection of all words that become trivial in that variety.
  2. It is the marginal subgroup for any collection of words that generates the variety, in the sense that a group is in the variety iff all those words are trivial in it.

Examples

Extreme examples

  • The whole group is the marginal subgroup for the word w(x)=x.
  • The trivial subgroup is the marginal subgroup for the empty word, i.e., the word that evaluates to the identity element for any element.

Commutator word and center

Marginal subgroup Corresponding word or words Corresponding variety
center commutator word [x1,x2]=x1x2x11x21 (this is the left-normed commutator, but the same holds for the right-normed commutator) abelian groups
second center [[x1,x2],x3] groups of nilpotency class at most two
finite cth member of upper central series [[x1,x2],x3],,xc+1] nilpotent groups of class at most c
marginal subgroup for variety of metabelian groups [[x1,x2],[x3,x4]] metabelian groups, i.e., groups of derived length at most two

Power words

  • The marginal subgroup for the power word x2 is the set of central elements of order dividing 2.

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]

Metaproperties

Metaproperty name Satisfied? Proof Statement with symbols
quotient-transitive subgroup property ? ? ?

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

Property Meaning Proof of implication Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) Intermediate notions
member of upper central series (finite part)

Weaker properties

Property Meaning Proof of implication Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) Intermediate notions
weakly marginal subgroup like marginal subgroup, but we now only require the marginality for a fixed letter of the word rather than for all letters of the word. direct weakly marginal not implies marginal |FULL LIST, MORE INFO
bound-word subgroup can be expressed in terms of words and equations
strictly characteristic subgroup invariant under all surjective endomorphisms
characteristic subgroup invariant under all automorphisms |FULL LIST, MORE INFO
finite direct power-closed characteristic subgroup in any finite direct power of the group, the corresponding direct power of the subgroup is characteristic

Dual property

The notion of marginal subgroup is somewhat dual to the notion of verbal subgroup, which is the subgroup generated by all elements realized using the given word.