Quotient-powering-invariant 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]
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This page describes a subgroup property obtained as a conjunction (AND) of two (or more) more fundamental subgroup properties: powering-invariant subgroup and normal subgroup satisfying the subgroup-to-quotient powering-invariance implication
View other subgroup property conjunctions | view all subgroup properties
Definition
A normal subgroup of a group is termed a quotient-powering-invariant subgroup if, for any prime number such that is a powered for , the quotient group is also powered for .
Metaproperties
| Metaproperty name | Satisfied? | Proof | Statement with symbols |
|---|---|---|---|
| quotient-transitive subgroup property | Yes | quotient-powering-invariance is quotient-transitive | If are such that is quotient-powering-invariant in and is quotient-powering-invariant in , then is quotient-powering-invariant in . |
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
Weaker properties
| Property | Meaning | Proof of implication | Proof of strictness (reverse implication failure) | Intermediate notions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| powering-invariant subgroup | quotient-powering-invariant implies powering-invariant | powering-invariant not implies quotient-powering-invariant | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO | |
| normal subgroup satisfying the subgroup-to-quotient powering-invariance implication | |FULL LIST, MORE INFO |
Properties whose conjunction with powering-invariance implies quotient-powering-invariance
The relevant subgroup property is normal subgroup satisfying the subgroup-to-quotient powering-invariance implication. In fact, the conjunction of this with powering-invariant subgroup precisely gives quotient-powering-invariant subgroup.
This property is implied both by being a central subgroup and by being a normal subgroup contained in the hypercenter.