Pro-p group

In mathematics, a pro-p group (for some prime number p) is a profinite group G such that for any open normal subgroup N\triangleleft G the quotient group G/N is a p-group. Note that, as profinite groups are compact, the open subgroups are exactly the closed subgroups of finite index, so that the discrete quotient group is always finite.

Alternatively, one can define a pro-p group to be the inverse limit of an inverse system of discrete finite p-groups.

The best-understood (and historically most important) class of pro-p groups is the p-adic analytic groups: groups with the structure of an analytic manifold over \mathbb{Q}_p such that group multiplication and inversion are both analytic functions. The work of Lubotzky and Mann, combined with Michel Lazard's solution to Hilbert's fifth problem over the p-adic numbers, shows that a pro-p group is p-adic analytic if and only if it has finite rank, i.e. there exists a positive integer r such that any closed subgroup has a topological generating set with no more than r elements.

The Coclass Theorems have been proved in 1994 by A. Shalev and independently by C. R. Leedham-Green. Theorem D is one of these theorems and asserts that, for any prime number p and any positive integer r, there exist only finitely many pro-p groups of coclass r. This finiteness result is fundamental for the classification of finite p-groups by means of directed coclass graphs.

Examples

\mathbb{Z}_{p} = \displaystyle \lim_{\leftarrow} \mathbb{Z}/p^n\mathbb{Z}.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, November 21, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.