Intermediately fully invariant subgroup
BEWARE! This term is nonstandard and is being used locally within the wiki. [SHOW MORE]
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]
Definition
Symbol-free definition
A subgroup of a group is termed intermediately fully characteristic if it is fully characteristic in every intermediate subgroup of the group containing it.
Definition with symbols
A subgroup of a group is termed intermediately fully characteristic in if, for any intermediate subgroup of , is fully characteristic in : for any endomorphism of , .
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
Weaker properties
Metaproperties
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
An intermediately fully characteristic subgroup of an intermediately fully characteristic subgroup need not be intermediately fully characteristic. For full proof, refer: Intermediate full characteristicity is not transitive
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
An arbitrary join of intermediately fully characteristic subgroups is intermediately fully characteristic. This follows from the fact that the intermediately operator preserves the property of being closed under joins. For full proof, refer: Intermediate full characteristicity is strongly join-closed