Modular subgroup

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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.

This is a variation of normality|Find other variations of normality | Read a survey article on varying normality

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 A of a group G is termed a modular subgroup if for any subgroups B and C of G such that AC:

<A,BC>=<A,B>C

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

  • [[[Nilpotent quotient-by-core subgroup]]

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

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.
ABOUT THIS PROPERTY: View variations of this property satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View variations of this property not satisfying intermediate subgroup condition
ABOUT INTERMEDIATE SUBROUP CONDITION:View all properties satisfying intermediate subgroup condition | View facts about intermediate subgroup condition

Suppose HKG such that H is modular in G. Then, clearly, H must be a modular element with respect to all choices of subgroups in G, and hence, in particular, in K.

Thus, H is also modular in K.

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.
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

A join of modular subgroups is modular. This follows from a general lattice-theoretic fact that a join of modular elements is modular.