Conjugacy class

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Class number (group theory))
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description

File:Dihedral-conjugacy-classes.svg
Two Cayley graphs of dihedral groups with conjugacy classes distinguished by color.

In mathematics, especially group theory, two elements a and b of a group are conjugate if there is an element g in the group such that b=gag1. This is an equivalence relation whose equivalence classes are called conjugacy classes. In other words, each conjugacy class is closed under b=gag1 for all elements g in the group.

Members of the same conjugacy class cannot be distinguished by using only the group structure, and therefore share many properties. The study of conjugacy classes of non-abelian groups is fundamental for the study of their structure.[1][2] For an abelian group, each conjugacy class is a set containing one element (singleton set).

Functions that are constant for members of the same conjugacy class are called class functions.

Motivation

The concept of conjugacy classes may come from trying to formalize the idea that two group elements are considered the "same" after a relabeling of elements.

For example, consider the symmetric group S5 of order 5, and elements σ and πσπ1 that are conjugate. An element πσπ1 can be viewed as simply "renaming" the elements 1,2,3,4,5 to π(1),π(2),π(3),π(4),π(5) then applying the permutation σ on this new labeling.

If σ=1321354254 then πσπ1=π(1)π(3)π(2)π(1)π(3)π(5)π(4)π(2)π(5)π(4)

The conjugacy action by π does not change the underlying structure of σ. In a way, permutations σ and πσπ1 have the same "shape".[3]

Another way to view the conjugacy action is by considering the general linear group GL(n) of invertible matrices. Two matrices A and B conjugate if there exist a matrix P such that B=PAP1, which is the same condition as matrix similarity. The two matrices are conjugates if they are the "same" under two possibly different bases, with P being the change-of-basis matrix.

Conjugates also come up in some important theorems of group theory. One example is the Sylow theorems, which state that every Sylow p-subgroup of a finite group G are conjugates to each other. It also appears in the proof of Cauchy's theorem, which makes use of conjugacy classes.

Definition

Let G be a group. Two elements a,bG are conjugate if there exists an element gG such that gag1=b, in which case b is called Template:Em of a and a is called a conjugate of b.

In the case of the general linear group GL(n) of invertible matrices, the conjugacy relation is called matrix similarity.

It can be easily shown that conjugacy is an equivalence relation and therefore partitions G into equivalence classes. (This means that every element of the group belongs to precisely one conjugacy class, and the classes Cl(a) and Cl(b) are equal if and only if a and b are conjugate, and disjoint otherwise.) The equivalence class that contains the element aG is Cl(a)={gag1:gG} and is called the conjugacy class of a. The Template:Visible anchor of G is the number of distinct (nonequivalent) conjugacy classes. All elements belonging to the same conjugacy class have the same order.

Conjugacy classes may be referred to by describing them, or more briefly by abbreviations such as "6A", meaning "a certain conjugacy class with elements of order 6", and "6B" would be a different conjugacy class with elements of order 6; the conjugacy class 1A is the conjugacy class of the identity which has order 1. In some cases, conjugacy classes can be described in a uniform way; for example, in the symmetric group they can be described by cycle type.

Examples

File:S4 conjugacy classes.png
All 4! = 24 possible permutations from S4, partitioned into conjugacy classes. Two elements belong in the same class iff they have the same cycle type.
File:D5 conjugacy classes.png
All 10 possible permutations from D5, partitioned into conjugacy classes.

The symmetric group S3, consisting of the 6 permutations of three elements, has three conjugacy classes:

  1. No change: (abcabc)
  2. Transposing two: (abcacb,abcbac,abccba)
  3. A cyclic permutation of all three: (abcbca,abccab)

These three classes also correspond to the classification of the isometries of an equilateral triangle.

The symmetric group S4, consisting of the 24 permutations of four elements, has five conjugacy classes, listed with their members using cycle notation:[4]

  1. No change: {(1)}
  2. Interchanging two: {(12),(13),(14),(23),(24),(34)}
  3. A cyclic permutation of three: {(123),(124),(132),(134),(142),(143),(234),(243)}
  4. A cyclic permutation of all four: {(1234),(1243),(1324),(1342),(1423),(1432)}
  5. Interchanging two, and also the other two: {(12)(34),(13)(24),(14)(23)}

In general, the number of conjugacy classes in the symmetric group Sn is equal to the number of integer partitions of n. This is because each conjugacy class corresponds to exactly one partition of {1,2,,n} into cycles, up to permutation of the elements of {1,2,,n}.

The dihedral group D5 consisting of symmetries of a pentagon, has four conjugacy classes:[5]

  1. The identity element: {1}
  2. Two conjugacy classes of size 2: {r,r4},{r2,r3}
  3. All the reflections: {s,rs,r2s,r3s,r4s}

For an abelian group, each conjugacy class is a set containing one element (singleton set).

Properties

  • The identity element is always the only element in its class, that is Cl(e)={e}.
  • If G is abelian then gag1=a for all a,gG, i.e. Cl(a)={a} for all aG (and the converse is also true: if all conjugacy classes are singletons then G is abelian).
  • If two elements a,bG belong to the same conjugacy class (that is, if they are conjugate), then they have the same order. More generally, every statement about a can be translated into a statement about b=gag1, because the map φ(x)=gxg1 is an automorphism of G called an inner automorphism. See the next property for an example.
  • If a and b are conjugate, then so are their powers ak and bk. (Proof: if a=gbg1 then ak=(gbg1)(gbg1)(gbg1)=gbkg1.) Thus taking Template:Mvarth powers gives a map on conjugacy classes, and one may consider which conjugacy classes are in its preimage. For example, in the symmetric group, the square of an element of type (3)(2) (a 3-cycle and a 2-cycle) is an element of type (3), therefore one of the power-up classes of (3) is the class (3)(2) (where a is a power-up class of ak).
  • An element aG lies in the center Z(G) of G if and only if its conjugacy class has only one element, a itself. More generally, if CG(a) denotes the Template:Em of aG, i.e., the subgroup consisting of all elements g such that ga=ag, then the index [G:CG(a)] is equal to the number of elements in the conjugacy class of a (by the orbit-stabilizer theorem).
  • Take σSn and let m1,m2,,ms be the distinct integers which appear as lengths of cycles in the cycle type of σ (including 1-cycles). Let ki be the number of cycles of length mi in σ for each i=1,2,,s (so that i=1skimi=n). Then the number of conjugates of σ is:[1]n!(k1!m1k1)(k2!m2k2)(ks!msks).

Conjugacy as group action

For any two elements g,xG, let gx:=gxg1. This defines a group action of G on G. The orbits of this action are the conjugacy classes, and the stabilizer of a given element is the element's centralizer.[6]

Similarly, we can define a group action of G on the set of all subsets of G, by writing gS:=gSg1, or on the set of the subgroups of G.

Conjugacy class equation

If G is a finite group, then for any group element a, the elements in the conjugacy class of a are in one-to-one correspondence with cosets of the centralizer CG(a). This can be seen by observing that any two elements b and c belonging to the same coset (and hence, b=cz for some z in the centralizer CG(a)) give rise to the same element when conjugating a: bab1=cza(cz)1=czaz1c1=cazz1c1=cac1. That can also be seen from the orbit-stabilizer theorem, when considering the group as acting on itself through conjugation, so that orbits are conjugacy classes and stabilizer subgroups are centralizers. The converse holds as well.

Thus the number of elements in the conjugacy class of a is the index [G:CG(a)] of the centralizer CG(a) in G; hence the size of each conjugacy class divides the order of the group.

Furthermore, if we choose a single representative element xi from every conjugacy class, we infer from the disjointness of the conjugacy classes that |G|=i[G:CG(xi)], where CG(xi) is the centralizer of the element xi. Observing that each element of the center Z(G) forms a conjugacy class containing just itself gives rise to the class equation:[7] |G|=|Z(G)|+i[G:CG(xi)], where the sum is over a representative element from each conjugacy class that is not in the center.

Knowledge of the divisors of the group order |G| can often be used to gain information about the order of the center or of the conjugacy classes.

Example

Consider a finite p-group G (that is, a group with order pn, where p is a prime number and n>0). We are going to prove that Template:Em.

Since the order of any conjugacy class of G must divide the order of G, it follows that each conjugacy class Hi that is not in the center also has order some power of pki, where 0<ki<n. But then the class equation requires that |G|=pn=|Z(G)|+ipki. From this we see that p must divide |Z(G)|, so |Z(G)|>1.

In particular, when n=2, then G is an abelian group since any non-trivial group element is of order p or p2. If some element a of G is of order p2, then G is isomorphic to the cyclic group of order p2, hence abelian. On the other hand, if every non-trivial element in G is of order p, hence by the conclusion above |Z(G)|>1, then |Z(G)|=p>1 or p2. We only need to consider the case when |Z(G)|=p>1, then there is an element b of G which is not in the center of G. Note that CG(b) includes b and the center which does not contain b but at least p elements. Hence the order of CG(b) is strictly larger than p, therefore |CG(b)|=p2, therefore b is an element of the center of G, a contradiction. Hence G is abelian and in fact isomorphic to the direct product of two cyclic groups each of order p.

Average Centralizer

Let G be a finite group. Consider the group action of G on itself given by conjugation. The orbits are the conjugacy classes of G and the set of fixed points of an element g is the centralizer CG(g).

Thus by Burnside's lemma, the number of conjugacy classes is equal to 1|G|g|CG(g)|, that is, the average size of the centralizer.

Conjugacy of subgroups and general subsets

More generally, given any subset SG (S not necessarily a subgroup), define a subset TG to be conjugate to S if there exists some gG such that T=gSg1. Let Cl(S) be the set of all subsets TG such that T is conjugate to S.

A frequently used theorem is that, given any subset SG, the index of N(S) (the normalizer of S) in G equals the cardinality of Cl(S): |Cl(S)|=[G:N(S)].

This follows since, if g,hG, then gSg1=hSh1 if and only if g1hN(S), in other words, if and only if g and h are in the same coset of N(S).

By using S={a}, this formula generalizes the one given earlier for the number of elements in a conjugacy class.

The above is particularly useful when talking about subgroups of G. The subgroups can thus be divided into conjugacy classes, with two subgroups belonging to the same class if and only if they are conjugate. Conjugate subgroups are isomorphic, but isomorphic subgroups need not be conjugate. For example, an abelian group may have two different subgroups which are isomorphic, but they are never conjugate.

Geometric interpretation

Conjugacy classes in the fundamental group of a path-connected topological space can be thought of as equivalence classes of free loops under free homotopy.

Conjugacy class and irreducible representations in finite group

In any finite group, the number of nonisomorphic irreducible representations over the complex numbers is precisely the number of conjugacy classes.

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

External links

  1. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Grillet (2007), [[[:Template:Google books]] p. 56]
  7. Grillet (2007), [[[:Template:Google books]] p. 57]