Index of a subgroup

In mathematics, specifically group theory, the index of a subgroup H in a group G is the "relative size" of H in G: equivalently, the number of "copies" (cosets) of H that fill up G. For example, if H has index 2 in G, then intuitively "half" of the elements of G lie in H. The index of H in G is usually denoted |G : H| or [G : H] or (G:H).

Formally, the index of H in G is defined as the number of cosets of H in G. (The number of left cosets of H in G is always equal to the number of right cosets.) For example, let Z be the group of integers under addition, and let 2Z be the subgroup of Z consisting of the even integers. Then 2Z has two cosets in Z (namely the even integers and the odd integers), so the index of 2Z in Z is two. To generalize,

|\mathbf{Z}:n\mathbf{Z}| = n

for any positive integer n.

If N is a normal subgroup of G, then the index of N in G is also equal to the order of the quotient group G / N, since this is defined in terms of a group structure on the set of cosets of N in G.

If G is infinite, the index of a subgroup H will in general be a non-zero cardinal number. It may be finite - that is, a positive integer - as the example above shows.

If G and H are finite groups, then the index of H in G is equal to the quotient of the orders of the two groups:

|G:H| = \frac{|G|}{|H|}.

This is Lagrange's theorem, and in this case the quotient is necessarily a positive integer.

Properties

|G:K| = |G:H|\,|H:K|.
|G:H\cap K| \le |G : H|\,|G : K|,
with equality if HK = G. (If |G : H  K| is finite, then equality holds if and only if HK = G.)
|H:H\cap K| \le |G:K|,
with equality if HK = G. (If |H : H  K| is finite, then equality holds if and only if HK = G.)
|G:\operatorname{ker}\;\varphi|=|\operatorname{im}\;\varphi|.
|Gx| = |G:G_x|.\!
This is known as the orbit-stabilizer theorem.
|G:\operatorname{Core}(H)| \le |G:H|!
where ! denotes the factorial function; this is discussed further below.
  • As a corollary, if the index of H in G is 2, or for a finite group the lowest prime p that divides the order of G, then H is normal, as the index of its core must also be p, and thus H equals its core, i.e., is normal.
  • Note that a subgroup of lowest prime index may not exist, such as in any simple group of non-prime order, or more generally any perfect group.

Examples

\{(x,y) \mid x\text{ is even}\},\quad \{(x,y) \mid y\text{ is even}\},\quad\text{and}\quad
\{(x,y) \mid x+y\text{ is even}\}.

Infinite index

If H has an infinite number of cosets in G, then the index of H in G is said to be infinite. In this case, the index |G : H| is actually a cardinal number. For example, the index of H in G may be countable or uncountable, depending on whether H has a countable number of cosets in G. Note that the index of H is at most the order of G, which is realized for the trivial subgroup, or in fact any subgroup H of infinite cardinality less than that of G.

Finite index

An infinite group G may have subgroups H of finite index (for example, the even integers inside the group of integers). Such a subgroup always contains a normal subgroup N (of G), also of finite index. In fact, if H has index n, then the index of N can be taken as some factor of n!; indeed, N can be taken to be the kernel of the natural homomorphism from G to the permutation group of the left (or right) cosets of H.

A special case, n = 2, gives the general result that a subgroup of index 2 is a normal subgroup, because the normal group (N above) must have index 2 and therefore be identical to the original subgroup. More generally, a subgroup of index p where p is the smallest prime factor of the order of G (if G is finite) is necessarily normal, as the index of N divides p! and thus must equal p, having no other prime factors.

An alternative proof of the result that subgroup of index lowest prime p is normal, and other properties of subgroups of prime index are given in (Lam 2004).

Examples

The above considerations are true for finite groups as well. For instance, the group O of chiral octahedral symmetry has 24 elements. It has a dihedral D4 subgroup (in fact it has three such) of order 8, and thus of index 3 in O, which we shall call H. This dihedral group has a 4-member D2 subgroup, which we may call A. Multiplying on the right any element of a right coset of H by an element of A gives a member of the same coset of H (Hca = Hc). A is normal in O. There are six cosets of A, corresponding to the six elements of the symmetric group S3. All elements from any particular coset of A perform the same permutation of the cosets of H.

On the other hand, the group Th of pyritohedral symmetry also has 24 members and a subgroup of index 3 (this time it is a D2h prismatic symmetry group, see point groups in three dimensions), but in this case the whole subgroup is a normal subgroup. All members of a particular coset carry out the same permutation of these cosets, but in this case they represent only the 3-element alternating group in the 6-member S3 symmetric group.

Normal subgroups of prime power index

Normal subgroups of prime power index are kernels of surjective maps to p-groups and have interesting structure, as described at Focal subgroup theorem: Subgroups and elaborated at focal subgroup theorem.

There are three important normal subgroups of prime power index, each being the smallest normal subgroup in a certain class:

As these are weaker conditions on the groups K, one obtains the containments

\mathbf{E}^p(G) \supseteq \mathbf{A}^p(G) \supseteq \mathbf{O}^p(G).

These groups have important connections to the Sylow subgroups and the transfer homomorphism, as discussed there.

Geometric structure

An elementary observation is that one cannot have exactly 2 subgroups of index 2, as the complement of their symmetric difference yields a third. This is a simple corollary of the above discussion (namely the projectivization of the vector space structure of the elementary abelian group

G/\mathbf{E}^p(G) \cong (\mathbf{Z}/p)^k,

and further, G does not act on this geometry, nor does it reflect any of the non-abelian structure (in both cases because the quotient is abelian).

However, it is an elementary result, which can be seen concretely as follows: the set of normal subgroups of a given index p form a projective space, namely the projective space

\mathbf{P}(\operatorname{Hom}(G,\mathbf{Z}/p)).

In detail, the space of homomorphisms from G to the (cyclic) group of order p, \operatorname{Hom}(G,\mathbf{Z}/p), is a vector space over the finite field \mathbf{F}_p = \mathbf{Z}/p. A non-trivial such map has as kernel a normal subgroup of index p, and multiplying the map by an element of (\mathbf{Z}/p)^\times (a non-zero number mod p) does not change the kernel; thus one obtains a map from

\mathbf{P}(\operatorname{Hom}(G,\mathbf{Z}/p)) :=  (\operatorname{Hom}(G,\mathbf{Z}/p))\setminus\{0\})/(\mathbf{Z}/p)^\times

to normal index p subgroups. Conversely, a normal subgroup of index p determines a non-trivial map to \mathbf{Z}/p up to a choice of "which coset maps to 1 \in \mathbf{Z}/p, which shows that this map is a bijection.

As a consequence, the number of normal subgroups of index p is

(p^{k+1}-1)/(p-1)=1+p+\cdots+p^k

for some k; k=-1 corresponds to no normal subgroups of index p. Further, given two distinct normal subgroups of index p, one obtains a projective line consisting of p+1 such subgroups.

For p=2, the symmetric difference of two distinct index 2 subgroups (which are necessarily normal) gives the third point on the projective line containing these subgroups, and a group must contain 0,1,3,7,15,\ldots index 2 subgroups – it cannot contain exactly 2 or 4 index 2 subgroups, for instance.

See also

References

    External links

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