Cayley's theorem

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In the mathematical discipline of group theory, Cayley's theorem, named in honour of Arthur Cayley, states that every group Template:Mvar is isomorphic to a subgroup of a symmetric group.[1] More specifically, Template:Mvar is isomorphic to a subgroup of the symmetric group Sym(G) whose elements are the permutations of the underlying set of Template:Mvar. Explicitly,

The homomorphism GSym(G) can also be understood as arising from the left translation action of Template:Mvar on the underlying set Template:Mvar.[2]

When Template:Mvar is finite, Sym(G) is finite too. The proof of Cayley's theorem in this case shows that if Template:Mvar is a finite group of order Template:Mvar, then Template:Mvar is isomorphic to a subgroup of the standard symmetric group Sn. But Template:Mvar might also be isomorphic to a subgroup of a smaller symmetric group, Sm for some m<n; for instance, the order 6 group G=S3 is not only isomorphic to a subgroup of S6, but also (trivially) isomorphic to a subgroup of S3.[3] The problem of finding the minimal-order symmetric group into which a given group Template:Mvar embeds is rather difficult.[4][5]

Alperin and Bell note that "in general the fact that finite groups are imbedded in symmetric groups has not influenced the methods used to study finite groups".[6]

When Template:Mvar is infinite, Sym(G) is infinite, but Cayley's theorem still applies.

History

When Cayley (1854) introduced what are now called groups, the modern definitions did not exist, and it was not immediately clear that this was equivalent to what were then called groups, which are now called permutation groups. Cayley's theorem unifies the two.

Although Burnside[7] attributes the theorem to Jordan,[8] Eric Nummela[9] nonetheless argues that the standard name—"Cayley's Theorem"—is in fact appropriate. Cayley's original 1854 paper,[10] showed that the correspondence in the theorem is one-to-one, but he did not explicitly show it was a homomorphism (and thus an embedding). However, Nummela notes that Cayley made this result known to the mathematical community at the time, thus predating Jordan by 16 years or so.

The theorem was later published by Walther Dyck in 1882[11] and is attributed to Dyck in the first edition of Burnside's book.[12]

Background

A permutation of a set Template:Mvar is a bijective function from Template:Mvar to Template:Mvar. The set of all permutations of Template:Mvar forms a group under function composition, called the symmetric group on Template:Mvar, and written as Sym(A).[13] In particular, taking Template:Mvar to be the underlying set of a group Template:Mvar produces a symmetric group denoted Sym(G).

Proof of the theorem

If g is any element of a group G with operation ∗, consider the function fg : GG, defined by fg(x) = gx. By the existence of inverses, this function has also an inverse, fg1. So multiplication by g acts as a bijective function. Thus, fg is a permutation of G, and so is a member of Sym(G).

The set K = {fg : gG} is a subgroup of Sym(G) that is isomorphic to G. The fastest way to establish this is to consider the function T : G → Sym(G) with T(g) = fg for every g in G. T is a group homomorphism because (using · to denote composition in Sym(G)):

(fgfh)(x)=fg(fh(x))=fg(h*x)=g*(h*x)=(g*h)*x=fg*h(x),

for all x in G, and hence:

T(g)T(h)=fgfh=fg*h=T(g*h).

The homomorphism T is injective since T(g) = idG (the identity element of Sym(G)) implies that gx = x for all x in G, and taking x to be the identity element e of G yields g = ge = e, i.e. the kernel is trivial. Alternatively, T is also injective since gx = g′ ∗ x implies that g = g (because every group is cancellative).

Thus G is isomorphic to the image of T, which is the subgroup K.

T is sometimes called the regular representation of G.

Alternative setting of proof

An alternative setting uses the language of group actions. We consider the group G as acting on itself by left multiplication, i.e. gx=gx, which has a permutation representation, say ϕ:GSym(G).

The representation is faithful if ϕ is injective, that is, if the kernel of ϕ is trivial. Suppose gkerϕ. Then, g=ge=ge=e. Thus, kerϕ is trivial. The result follows by use of the first isomorphism theorem, from which we get ImϕG.

Remarks on the regular group representation

The identity element of the group corresponds to the identity permutation. All other group elements correspond to derangements: permutations that do not leave any element unchanged. Since this also applies for powers of a group element, lower than the order of that element, each element corresponds to a permutation that consists of cycles all of the same length: this length is the order of that element. The elements in each cycle form a right coset of the subgroup generated by the element.

Examples of the regular group representation

2={0,1} with addition modulo 2; group element 0 corresponds to the identity permutation e, group element 1 to permutation (12) (see cycle notation). E.g. 0 +1 = 1 and 1+1 = 0, so 10 and 01, as they would under a permutation.

3={0,1,2} with addition modulo 3; group element 0 corresponds to the identity permutation e, group element 1 to permutation (123), and group element 2 to permutation (132). E.g. 1 + 1 = 2 corresponds to (123)(123) = (132).

4={0,1,2,3} with addition modulo 4; the elements correspond to e, (1234), (13)(24), (1432).

The elements of Klein four-group {e, a, b, c} correspond to e, (12)(34), (13)(24), and (14)(23).

S3 (dihedral group of order 6) is the group of all permutations of 3 objects, but also a permutation group of the 6 group elements, and the latter is how it is realized by its regular representation.

* e a b c d f permutation
e e a b c d f e
a a e d f b c (12)(35)(46)
b b f e d c a (13)(26)(45)
c c d f e a b (14)(25)(36)
d d c a b f e (156)(243)
f f b c a e d (165)(234)

More general statement

Theorem: Let Template:Mvar be a group, and let Template:Mvar be a subgroup. Let G/H be the set of left cosets of Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar. Let Template:Mvar be the normal core of Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar, defined to be the intersection of the conjugates of Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar. Then the quotient group G/N is isomorphic to a subgroup of Sym(G/H).

The special case H=1 is Cayley's original theorem.

See also

Notes

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References

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