Endomorphism kernel: Difference between revisions
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! No. !! Shorthand !! A [[subgroup]] of a [[group]] is termed an endomorphism kernel if ... !! A subgroup <math>H</math> of a [[group]] <math>G</math> is termed an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math> if ... | ! No. !! Shorthand !! A [[subgroup]] of a [[group]] is termed an endomorphism kernel if ... !! A subgroup <math>H</math> of a [[group]] <math>G</math> is termed an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math> if ... | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1 || normal, quotient isomorphic to subgroup || it is [[normal subgroup|normal]] in the whole group and its [[quotient group]] is isomorphic to some subgroup of the whole group. || <math>H</math> is a normal subgroup of <math>G</math> and there is a subgroup <math> | | 1 || normal, quotient isomorphic to subgroup || it is [[normal subgroup|normal]] in the whole group and its [[quotient group]] is isomorphic to some subgroup of the whole group. || <math>H</math> is a normal subgroup of <math>G</math> and there is a subgroup <math>M</math> of <math>G</math> such that the [[quotient group]] <math>G/H</math> is isomorphic to <math>M</math>. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 2 || endomorphism kernel || there is an endomorphism of the whole group whose kernel is precisely the subgroup. || there is an endomorphism <math>\sigma</math> of <math>G</math> such that the kernel of <math>\sigma</math> is <math>H</math> | | 2 || endomorphism kernel || there is an endomorphism of the whole group whose kernel is precisely the subgroup. || there is an endomorphism <math>\sigma</math> of <math>G</math> such that the kernel of <math>\sigma</math> is <math>H</math> | ||
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==Metaproperties== | |||
{| class="sortable" border="1" | |||
! Metaproperty name !! Satisfied? !! Proof !! Statement with symbols | |||
|- | |||
| [[dissatisfies metaproperty::transitive subgroup property]] || No || [[endomorphism kernel is not transitive]] || It is possible to have group <math>H \le K \le G</math> such that <math>H</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>K</math> and <math>K</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math> but <math>H</math> is not an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math>. | |||
|- | |||
| [[dissatisfies metaproperty::intermediate subgroup condition]] || No || [[endomorphism kernel does not satisfy intermediate subgroup condition]] || It is possible to have groups <math>H \le K \le G</math> such that <math>H</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math> but is not an endomorphism kernel in <math>K</math>. | |||
|- | |||
| [[satisfies metaproperty::quotient-transitive subgroup property]] || Yes || [[endomorphism kernel is quotient-transitive]] || Suppose <math>H \le K \le G</math> are [[group]]s such that <math>H</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math> and <math>K/H</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>G/H</math>. Then, <math>K</math> is an endomorphism kernel in <math>G</math>. | |||
|- | |||
| [[satisfies metaproperty::trim subgroup property]] || Yes || obvious || in any group <math>G</math>, the trivial subgroup and the whole group <math>G</math> are endomorphism kernels. | |||
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==Relation with other properties== | ==Relation with other properties== | ||
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| [[Stronger than::normal subgroup]] || || (by definition) || [[normal not implies endomorphism kernel]] || {{intermediate notions short|normal subgroup|endomorphism kernel}} | | [[Stronger than::normal subgroup]] || || (by definition) || [[normal not implies endomorphism kernel]] || {{intermediate notions short|normal subgroup|endomorphism kernel}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 18:21, 16 February 2013
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
Equivalent definitions in tabular format
| No. | Shorthand | A subgroup of a group is termed an endomorphism kernel if ... | A subgroup of a group is termed an endomorphism kernel in if ... |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | normal, quotient isomorphic to subgroup | it is normal in the whole group and its quotient group is isomorphic to some subgroup of the whole group. | is a normal subgroup of and there is a subgroup of such that the quotient group is isomorphic to . |
| 2 | endomorphism kernel | there is an endomorphism of the whole group whose kernel is precisely the subgroup. | there is an endomorphism of such that the kernel of is |
Metaproperties
| Metaproperty name | Satisfied? | Proof | Statement with symbols |
|---|---|---|---|
| transitive subgroup property | No | endomorphism kernel is not transitive | It is possible to have group such that is an endomorphism kernel in and is an endomorphism kernel in but is not an endomorphism kernel in . |
| intermediate subgroup condition | No | endomorphism kernel does not satisfy intermediate subgroup condition | It is possible to have groups such that is an endomorphism kernel in but is not an endomorphism kernel in . |
| quotient-transitive subgroup property | Yes | endomorphism kernel is quotient-transitive | Suppose are groups such that is an endomorphism kernel in and is an endomorphism kernel in . Then, is an endomorphism kernel in . |
| trim subgroup property | Yes | obvious | in any group , the trivial subgroup and the whole group are endomorphism kernels. |
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
| Property | Meaning | Proof of implication | Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) | Intermediate notions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| complemented normal subgroup | complemented normal implies endomorphism kernel | endomorphism kernel not implies complemented normal | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO | |
| direct factor | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO | |||
| subgroup of finite abelian group | follows from subgroup lattice and quotient lattice of finite abelian group are isomorphic | (trivial subgroup, whole group are endomorphism kernels even in non-abelian groups) | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO |
Weaker properties
| Property | Meaning | Proof of implication | Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) | Intermediate notions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| quotient-powering-invariant subgroup | endomorphism kernel implies quotient-powering-invariant | any normal subgroup of a finite group that is not an endomorphism kernel works. | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO | |
| normal subgroup | (by definition) | normal not implies endomorphism kernel | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO |