Join-transitively subnormal subgroup
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
Symbol-free definition
A subgroup of a group is termed join-transitively subnormal if its join (viz the subgroup generated) with any subnormal subgroup is again subnormal.
Definition with symbols
A subgroup of a group is termed join-transitively subnormal if whenever (viz., is subnormal in ), the group is subnormal in .
Formalisms
In terms of the join-transiter
This property is obtained by applying the join-transiter to the property: subnormal subgroup
View other properties obtained by applying the join-transiter
The subgroup property of being join-transitively subnormal is obtained by applying the join-transiter to the subgroup property of being subnormal.
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
- Component
- Perfect subnormal subgroup
- Normal subgroup
- 2-subnormal subgroup: For full proof, refer: 2-subnormal implies join-transitively subnormal
- Permutable subgroup (for finite groups): For full proof, refer: Permutable implies join-transitively subnormal in finite
- Subnormal subgroup of finite index
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).
View other trim subgroup properties | View other trivially true subgroup properties | View other identity-true subgroup properties
Clearly, the whole group is join-transitively subnormal, because its join with any subgroup is the whole group. Also, the trivial subgroup is join-transitively subnormal, because its join with any subnormal subgroup is the same subnormal subgroup.
Join-closedness
YES: This subgroup property is join-closed: an arbitrary (nonempty) join of subgroups with this property, also has this property.
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property that are join-closed | View variations of this property that are not join-closed
ABOUT JOIN-CLOSEDNESS: View all join-closed subgroup properties (or, strongly join-closed properties) | View all subgroup properties that are not join-closed | Read a survey article on proving join-closedness | Read a survey article on disproving join-closedness
By the general theory of transiters, the join-transiter of any subgroup property is itself a finite-join-closed subgroup property.