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:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\quad \mid G\mid =[G:H]\mid H\mid \end{aligned}}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/df17e8aa40c845ab86059fd333cb453a04f09ae1)
- Therefore
divides
, i.e., the number of elements in any subgroup
of a finite group
must divide the number of elements in
. 
Corollaries to Lagrange's Theorem
Recall that if
is a finite group and
is a subgroup then the number of elements in
must divide the number of elements in
and moreover:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\quad \mid G\mid =[G:H]\mid H\mid \end{aligned}}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/df17e8aa40c845ab86059fd333cb453a04f09ae1)
We will now prove some amazing corollaries relating to Lagrange's theorem.
Corollary 1: Let
be a finite group and let
be a subgroup. Then the index of
is
is given by
.
- Proof: Rearrange the formula in the proof of Lagrange's theorem.

Corollary 2: Let
be a finite group and let
. Then the order of the element
must divide
.
The order of an element
is the smallest positive integer
such that
(where of course,
is the identity element for the group.
- Proof: The order of the element
is the smallest positive integer
such that
. The generated subgroup
is such that
. So by Lagrange's theorem
must divide
, i.e., the order of
must divide
.
Corollary 3: Let
be a finite group of order
where
is a prime number. Then
is a cyclic group.
- Proof: Let
be any non-identity element in
(which exists since
). By Lagrange's Theorem, the subgroup
must be such that
divides
. But the only positive divisors of
are
and
.
- So if
then
which is a contradiction since we assumed that
is not the identity for the group. So
, i.e.,
. So
is a cyclic group.
Corollary 4: Let
be a finite group and let
and
be subgroups of
such that
. Then
.
- Proof: By Lagrange's theorem we have that:
![{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\quad [G:I]&={\frac {\mid G\mid }{\mid I\mid }}={\frac {\mid G\mid }{\mid H\mid }}\cdot {\frac {\mid H\mid }{\mid I\mid }}=[G:H][H:I]\quad \blacksquare \end{aligned}}}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/552f4b64ea84286ec33c53a1930001b7de0868a6)
Licensing
Content obtained and/or adapted from: