N-abelian group: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
(→Facts) |
||
| Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
* [[2-abelian iff abelian]] | * [[2-abelian iff abelian]] | ||
* [[-1-abelian iff abelian]] | * [[-1-abelian iff abelian]] | ||
* [[n-abelian iff (1-n)-abelian]] | |||
* [[n-abelian implies every nth power and (n-1)th power commute]] | * [[n-abelian implies every nth power and (n-1)th power commute]] | ||
* [[n-abelian implies n(n-1)-central]] | * [[n-abelian implies n(n-1)-central]] | ||
Revision as of 18:51, 10 August 2012
Definition
Suppose is an integer. A group is termed a -abelian group if the power map is an endomorphism of , i.e., for all . If this is the case, then the power map is termed a universal power endomorphism of .
The set of for which is -abelian is termed the exponent semigroup of . It is a submonoid of the multiplicative monoid of integers.
Facts
- Every group is 0-abelian and 1-abelian.
- Abelian implies n-abelian for all n
- 2-abelian iff abelian
- -1-abelian iff abelian
- n-abelian iff (1-n)-abelian
- n-abelian implies every nth power and (n-1)th power commute
- n-abelian implies n(n-1)-central