Difference between revisions of "Cosets and Lagrange’s Theorem"
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− | <li><strong>Proof:</strong | + | <li><strong>Proof:</strong>The set of left cosets of <span class="math-inline"><math>H</math></span> partition <span class="math-inline"><math>G</math></span>, that is for all <span class="math-inline"><math>g_1, g_2 \in G</math></span> with <span class="math-inline"><math>g_1 \neq g_2</math></span> we have that, <span class="math-inline"><math>g_1H \cap g_2H = \emptyset</math></span> and:</li> |
</ul> | </ul> | ||
<div style="text-align: center;"><math>\begin{align} \quad G = \bigcup_{g \in G} gH \end{align}</math></div> | <div style="text-align: center;"><math>\begin{align} \quad G = \bigcup_{g \in G} gH \end{align}</math></div> | ||
<ul> | <ul> | ||
− | <li>The number of left cosets of <span class="math-inline"><math>H</math></span> is the index <span class="math-inline"><math>[G : H]</math></span> and | + | <li>The number of left cosets of <span class="math-inline"><math>H</math></span> is the index <span class="math-inline"><math>[G : H]</math></span> and the number of elements in <span class="math-inline"><math>gH</math></span> is equal to the number of elements in <span class="math-inline"><math>H</math></span>. So:</li> |
</ul> | </ul> | ||
<div style="text-align: center;"><math>\begin{align} \quad \mid G \mid = [G : H] \mid H \mid \end{align}</math></div> | <div style="text-align: center;"><math>\begin{align} \quad \mid G \mid = [G : H] \mid H \mid \end{align}</math></div> | ||
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<li>Therefore <span class="math-inline"><math>\mid H \mid</math></span> divides <span class="math-inline"><math>\mid G \mid</math></span>, i.e., the number of elements in any subgroup <span class="math-inline"><math>(H, \cdot)</math></span> of a finite group <span class="math-inline"><math>(G, \cdot)</math></span> must divide the number of elements in <span class="math-inline"><math>(G, \cdot)</math></span>. <span class="math-inline"><math>\blacksquare</math></span></li> | <li>Therefore <span class="math-inline"><math>\mid H \mid</math></span> divides <span class="math-inline"><math>\mid G \mid</math></span>, i.e., the number of elements in any subgroup <span class="math-inline"><math>(H, \cdot)</math></span> of a finite group <span class="math-inline"><math>(G, \cdot)</math></span> must divide the number of elements in <span class="math-inline"><math>(G, \cdot)</math></span>. <span class="math-inline"><math>\blacksquare</math></span></li> | ||
</ul> | </ul> | ||
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== Licensing == | == Licensing == |
Revision as of 15:25, 17 November 2021
Contents
Left and Right Cosets of Subgroups
Definition: Let be a group and let be a subgroup. Let . Then the Left Coset of with Representative is the set . The Right Coset of with Representative is the set .
When the operation symbol “” is used instead of we often denote the left and right cosets of with representation with the notation and respectively.
For example, consider the group and the subgroup . Consider the element . Then the left coset of with representative is:
And the right coset of with representative is:
In this particular example we see that . But in general, is for a given subgroup of and for ? The answer is NO. There are many examples when left cosets are not equal to corresponding right cosets.
To illustrate this, consider the symmetric group . Let . Then is a subgroup of since , is closed under , and , (since is a transposition). Now consider the element . Then the left coset of with representative is:
And the right coset of with representative is:
We note that and so !
So, when exactly are the left and right cosets of a subgroup with representative equal? The following theorem gives us a simple criterion for a large class of groups.
Proposition 1: Let be a group and let be a subgroup. If is abelian then for all , .
- Proof: Let . If is abelian then for all (and hence for all ) we have that . So:
Proposition 2: Let be a group, a subgroup, and . Then the following statements are equivalent:
a) .
b) .
c) .
d) .
e) .
The Set of Left (Right) Cosets of a Subgroup Partitions the Whole Group
Recall that if is a group, is a subgroup, and then the left coset of with representative is the set:
The right coset of with representative is the set:
We will now look at a nice theorem which tells us that the set of all left cosets of a subgroup actually partitions . The proof below can be mirrored to analogously show that the set of all right cosets of a subgroup also partitions .
Theorem 1: Let be a group and let a subgroup. Then the set of all left cosets of partitions .
Recall that a partition of a set is a collection of nonempty subsets of that are pairwise disjoint and whose union is all of .
- Proof: We first show that any two distinct left cosets of are disjoint. Let , and assume the left cosets and are distinct. Suppose that . Then there exists an . So and and there exists such that:
- So using and we see that . So . But since is a group and is hence closed under . So . But this means that , a contradiction since and distinct. So the assumption that was false. So:
- Now if is the identity element for then since is a subgroup and must contain the identity element. So for all . So:
- Therefore the left cosets of partition .
The Number of Elements in a Left (Right) Coset
Recall that if is a group, is a subgroup, and then the left coset of with representative is defined as:
The right coset of with representative is defined as:
We will now look at a rather simple theorem which will tell us that the number of elements in a left (or right coset) will equal to the number of elements in . This seems rather obvious since contains elements of the form where we range through all of . So has at most the same number of elements in . Of course, may have less elements if for distinct . Of course this cannot be since by cancellation we would then have that . We make this argument more rigorous below.
Theorem 1: Let be a group, a subgroup, and let . Then the number of elements in equals the number of elements in , i.e., . Similarly, .
We only prove the case of this theorem for left cosets. The case for right cosets is analogous.
- Proof: Define a function for all by:
- We will show that is bijective. First we show that is injective. Let and assume that . Then we have that:
- By left cancellation this implies that and so is injective. We now show that is surjective. Let . Then (somewhat trivially) so is surjective.
- Since is bijective we have that so the number of elements in the left coset is equal to the number of elements in .
The Index of a Subgroup
If is a group and is a subgroup then we might want to know the number of left cosets and the number of right cosets of . As the following theorem will show - the number of left cosets of will always equal the number of right cosets of .
Theorem 1: Let be a group and let be a subgroup. Then the number of left cosets of equals the number of right cosets of .
- Proof: Let denote the set of all left cosets of and let denote the set of all right cosets of . Define a function for all by
- If we can show that is bijective then . We first show that is injective. Let and suppose that . Then:
- But then by the theorem of equivalent statements presented on the <a href="/left-and-right-cosets-of-subgroups">Left and Right Cosets of Subgroups</a> page we must have that:
- Hence is injective. We now show that is surjective. Let . Then we have that for that:
- So is indeed surjective. Since is a function from a finite set to a finite set that is bijective we must have that , i.e., the number of left cosets of equals the number of right cosets of .
With the result above, we can unambiguously define the index of subgroup in a group .
Definition: Let be a group and let be a subgroup. The Index of in denoted is defined as the number of left (or right) cosets of .
For example, consider the symmetric group and let . Let's find the index . Note that . So the left cosets of in are:
So the set of left cosets of is:
There are three such cosets so .
For another example, consider the group and the subgroup . Then the left cosets of are:
Note that if then . So in this example we have that .
Lagrange's Theorem
We now have all of the tools to prove a very important and astonishing theorem regarding subgroups. This theorem is known as Lagrange's theorem and will tell us that the number of elements in a subgroup of a larger group must divide the number of elements in the larger group.
Theorem 1 (Lagrange's Theorem): Let be a finite group and let be a subgroup. Then the number of elements in must divide the number of elements in .
- Proof:The set of left cosets of partition , that is for all with we have that, and:
- The number of left cosets of is the index and the number of elements in is equal to the number of elements in . So:
- Therefore divides , i.e., the number of elements in any subgroup of a finite group must divide the number of elements in .
Licensing
Content obtained and/or adapted from:
- Left and Right Cosets of Subgroups, mathonline.wikidot.com under a CC BY-SA license
- The Set of Left (Right) Cosets of a Subgroup Partitions the Whole Group, mathonline.wikidot.com under a CC BY-SA license
- The Number of Elements in a Left (Right) Coset, mathonline.wikidot.com under a CC BY-SA license
- The Index of a Subgroup, mathonline.wikidot.com under a CC BY-SA license