Pronormal subgroup: Difference between revisions

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{{variationof|normality}}
{{variationof|normality}}
==History==
===Origin===
{{term introduced by|Hall}}
The notion of pronormal subgroup was introduced by Philip Hall and the first nontrivial results on it were obtained by John S. Rose in his paper ''Finite soluble groups with pronormal system normalizers''.


==Definition==
==Definition==
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The property of pronormality is not transitive. The subordination of this property is the property of being [[subpronormal subgroup|subpronormal]]. {{verify}}
The property of pronormality is not transitive. The subordination of this property is the property of being [[subpronormal subgroup|subpronormal]]. {{verify}}
==References==
* ''Finite soluble groups with pronormal system normalizers'' by John S. Rose, ''Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society(3) 17 (1967), 447-69''

Revision as of 05:33, 25 May 2007

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]

This is a variation of normality|Find other variations of normality | Read a survey article on varying normality

History

Origin

This term was introduced by: Hall

The notion of pronormal subgroup was introduced by Philip Hall and the first nontrivial results on it were obtained by John S. Rose in his paper Finite soluble groups with pronormal system normalizers.

Definition

Symbol-free definition

A subgroup of a group is termed pronormal if any conjugate of the subgroup inside the whole group is also conjugate inside any intermediate subgroup.

Definition with symbols

A subgroup of a group is termed pronormal if for any in , there exists such that .

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

Weaker properties=

Metaproperties

Intermediate subgroup condition

YES: This subgroup property satisfies the intermediate subgroup condition: if a subgroup has the property in the whole group, it has the property in every intermediate subgroup.
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View variations of this property not satisfying intermediate subgroup condition
ABOUT INTERMEDIATE SUBROUP CONDITION:View all properties satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View facts about intermediate subgroup condition

Pronormality satisfies the intermediate subgroup condition, that is, any pronormal subgroup is pronormal in every intermediate subgroup.

Intersection-closedness

This subgroup property is not intersection-closed, viz., it is not true that an intersection of subgroups with this property must have this property.
Read an article on methods to prove that a subgroup property is not intersection-closed

An intersection of pronormal subgroups need not be pronormal. This statement needs to be verified.

Transitivity

NO: This subgroup property is not transitive: a subgroup with this property in a subgroup with this property, need not have the property in the whole group
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property that are transitive|View variations of this property that are not transitive
ABOUT TRANSITIVITY: View a complete list of subgroup properties that are not transitive|View facts related to transitivity of subgroup properties | View a survey article on disproving transitivity

The property of pronormality is not transitive. The subordination of this property is the property of being subpronormal. This statement needs to be verified.

References

  • Finite soluble groups with pronormal system normalizers by John S. Rose, Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society(3) 17 (1967), 447-69