Potentially characteristic subgroups characterization problem

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This article describes an open problem in the following area of/related to group theory: group theory

Statement

Given a group and group property satisfied by , the goal of the problem is to characterize, for each of the properties given below, all the subgroups satisfying that property:

  • characteristic-potentially characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of for which there exists a group containing and satisfying such that both and are characteristic subgroups of .
  • normal-potentially characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of for which there exists a group containing and satisfying such that is characteristic in and is normal in .
  • normal-potentially relatively characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of for which there exists a group containing and satisfying such that is normal in and is invariant under all the automorphisms of that extend to automorphisms of .
  • potentially characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of for which there exists a group containing and satisfying such that is characteristic in .
  • image-potentially characteristic subgroup: Find all subgroups of such that there is a surjective homomorphism such that satisfies and a characteristic subgroup of such that .
  • semi-strongly image-potentially characteristic subgroup relative to  : Find all subgroups of such that there is a surjective homomorphism from a group satisfying such that is characteristic in .
  • strongly image-potentially characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of such that there is a surjective homomorphism from a group satisfying such that the kernel of and are both characteristic in .
  • retract-potentially characteristic subgroup relative to : Find all subgroups of for which there exists a group containing as a retract and satisfying such that is normal in and is invariant under all the automorphisms of that extend to automorphisms of .

They all lie between characteristic subgroup and normal subgroup.

Known best results for equality with normality

The major results are the NPC theorem, NIPC theorem, finite NPC theorem, and finite NIPC theorem which show that for all groups as well as for finite groups, potentially characteristic subgroups and strongly image-potentially characteristic subgroups are normal.

Contrary results are results such as the fact that normal not implies normal-potentially characteristic, the proof of which works both for all groups and for finite groups. Also of note are contrary results for infinite abelian groups.

The most surprising contrary result is the following: every finite p-group is a subgroup of a finite p-group that is not characteristic in any finite p-group properly containing it. This gives plenty of examples of subgroups that are not finite-p-potentially characteristic subgroups.

group property characteristic-potentially characteristic normal-potentially characteristic potentially characteristic image-potentially characteristic semi-strongly image-potentially characteristic strongly image-potentially characteristic retract-potentially characteristic
all groups no no yes yes yes yes yes
finite group no (same as above) no (same as above) yes yes yes yes yes
abelian group no no no no no no no
finite abelian group yes yes yes yes yes no
group of prime power order no no no ? ? ? ?

Normal-potentially characteristic subgroups: elaboration

The property of being a normal-potentially characteristic subgroup is strictly between characteristicity and normality. The following results are known: