Inner automorphism

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Template:Short description In abstract algebra, an inner automorphism is an automorphism of a group, ring, or algebra given by the conjugation action of a fixed element, called the conjugating element. They can be realized via operations from within the group itself, hence the adjective "inner". These inner automorphisms form a subgroup of the automorphism group, and the quotient of the automorphism group by this subgroup is defined as the outer automorphism group.

Definition

If Template:Mvar is a group and Template:Mvar is an element of Template:Mvar (alternatively, if Template:Mvar is a ring, and Template:Mvar is a unit), then the function

φg:GGφg(x):=g1xg

is called (right) conjugation by Template:Mvar (see also conjugacy class). This function is an endomorphism of Template:Mvar: for all x1,x2G,

φg(x1x2)=g1x1x2g=g1x1(gg1)x2g=(g1x1g)(g1x2g)=φg(x1)φg(x2),

where the second equality is given by the insertion of the identity between x1 and x2. Furthermore, it has a left and right inverse, namely φg1. Thus, φg is both an monomorphism and epimorphism, and so an isomorphism of Template:Mvar with itself, i.e. an automorphism. An inner automorphism is any automorphism that arises from conjugation.[1]

File:Venn Diagram of Homomorphisms.jpg
General relationship between various group homomorphisms.

When discussing right conjugation, the expression g1xg is often denoted exponentially by xg. This notation is used because composition of conjugations satisfies the identity: (xg1)g2=xg1g2 for all g1,g2G. This shows that right conjugation gives a right action of Template:Mvar on itself.

A common example is as follows:[2][3]

File:Diagram of Inn(G) Example.jpg
Relationship of morphisms and elements

Describe a homomorphism Φ for which the image, Im(Φ), is a normal subgroup of inner automorphisms of a group G; alternatively, describe a natural homomorphism of which the kernel of Φ is the center of G (all gG for which conjugating by them returns the trivial automorphism), in other words, Ker(Φ)=Z(G). There is always a natural homomorphism Φ:GAut(G), which associates to every gG an (inner) automorphism φg in Aut(G). Put identically, Φ:gφg.

Let φg(x):=gxg1 as defined above. This requires demonstrating that (1) φg is a homomorphism, (2) φg is also a bijection, (3) Φ is a homomorphism.

  1. φg(xx)=gxxg1=gx(g1g)xg1=(gxg1)(gxg1)=φg(x)φg(x)
  2. The condition for bijectivity may be verified by simply presenting an inverse such that we can return to x from gxg1. In this case it is conjugation by g1denoted as φg1.
  3. Φ(gg)(x)=(gg)x(gg)1 and Φ(g)Φ(g)(x)=Φ(g)(gxg'1)=ggxg'1g1=(gg)x(gg)1

Inner and outer automorphism groups

The composition of two inner automorphisms is again an inner automorphism, and with this operation, the collection of all inner automorphisms of Template:Mvar is a group, the inner automorphism group of Template:Mvar denoted Template:Math.

Template:Math is a normal subgroup of the full automorphism group Template:Math of Template:Mvar. The outer automorphism group, Template:Math is the quotient group

Out(G)=Aut(G)/Inn(G).

The outer automorphism group measures, in a sense, how many automorphisms of Template:Mvar are not inner. Every non-inner automorphism yields a non-trivial element of Template:Math, but different non-inner automorphisms may yield the same element of Template:Math.

Saying that conjugation of Template:Mvar by Template:Mvar leaves Template:Mvar unchanged is equivalent to saying that Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar commute:

a1xa=xxa=ax.

Therefore the existence and number of inner automorphisms that are not the identity mapping is a kind of measure of the failure of the commutative law in the group (or ring).

An automorphism of a group Template:Mvar is inner if and only if it extends to every group containing Template:Mvar.[4]

By associating the element Template:Math with the inner automorphism Template:Math in Template:Math as above, one obtains an isomorphism between the quotient group Template:Math (where Template:Math is the center of Template:Mvar) and the inner automorphism group:

G/Z(G)Inn(G).

This is a consequence of the first isomorphism theorem, because Template:Math is precisely the set of those elements of Template:Mvar that give the identity mapping as corresponding inner automorphism (conjugation changes nothing).

Non-inner automorphisms of finite Template:Mvar-groups

A result of Wolfgang Gaschütz says that if Template:Mvar is a finite non-abelian [[p-group|Template:Mvar-group]], then Template:Mvar has an automorphism of Template:Mvar-power order which is not inner.

It is an open problem whether every non-abelian Template:Mvar-group Template:Mvar has an automorphism of order Template:Mvar. The latter question has positive answer whenever Template:Mvar has one of the following conditions:

  1. Template:Mvar is nilpotent of class 2
  2. Template:Mvar is a [[regular p-group|regular Template:Mvar-group]]
  3. Template:Math is a [[powerful p-group|powerful Template:Mvar-group]]
  4. The centralizer in Template:Mvar, Template:Math, of the center, Template:Mvar, of the Frattini subgroup, Template:Math, of Template:Mvar, Template:Math, is not equal to Template:Math

Types of groups

The inner automorphism group of a group Template:Mvar, Template:Math, is trivial (i.e., consists only of the identity element) if and only if Template:Mvar is abelian.

The group Template:Math is cyclic only when it is trivial.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, the inner automorphisms may exhaust the entire automorphism group; a group whose automorphisms are all inner and whose center is trivial is called complete. This is the case for all of the symmetric groups on Template:Mvar elements when Template:Mvar is not 2 or 6. When Template:Math, the symmetric group has a unique non-trivial class of non-inner automorphisms, and when Template:Math, the symmetric group, despite having no non-inner automorphisms, is abelian, giving a non-trivial center, disqualifying it from being complete.

If the inner automorphism group of a perfect group Template:Mvar is simple, then Template:Mvar is called quasisimple.

Lie algebra case

An automorphism of a Lie algebra Template:Math is called an inner automorphism if it is of the form Template:Math, where Template:Math is the adjoint map and Template:Mvar is an element of a Lie group whose Lie algebra is Template:Math. The notion of inner automorphism for Lie algebras is compatible with the notion for groups in the sense that an inner automorphism of a Lie group induces a unique inner automorphism of the corresponding Lie algebra.

Extension

If Template:Mvar is the group of units of a ring, Template:Mvar, then an inner automorphism on Template:Mvar can be extended to a mapping on the [[projective line over a ring|projective line over Template:Mvar]] by the group of units of the matrix ring, Template:Math. In particular, the inner automorphisms of the classical groups can be extended in that way.

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

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