Modular subgroup
This subgroup property arises from a property of elements in lattices, when applied to the given subgroup as an element in the lattice of subgroups of a given group.
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Definition
Symbol-free definition
A subgroup of a group is termed a modular subgroup if it is a modular element in the lattice of subgroups.
Definition with symbols
A subgroup of a group is termed a modular subgroup if for any subgroups and of such that :
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
The proof for permutable subgroups (and hence, for normal subgroups) follows from the modular property of groups.
Weaker properties
Metaproperties
Trimness
This subgroup property is trim -- it is both trivially true (true for the trivial subgroup) and identity-true (true for a group as a subgroup of itself).
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The whole group is clearly a modular subgroup of itself. So is the trivial subgroup.
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.
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Suppose such that is modular in . Then, clearly, must be a modular element with respect to all choices of subgroups in , and hence, in particular, in .
Thus, is also modular in .
In fact, it's a general lattice-theoretic fact that any modular element is also modular in any interval sublattice.
Join-closedness
YES: This subgroup property is join-closed: an arbitrary (nonempty) join of subgroups with this property, also has this property.
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A join of modular subgroups is modular. This follows from a general lattice-theoretic fact that a join of modular elements is modular.