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Revision of Properties of groups from Mon, 01/06/2009 - 01:56

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Quick description

This page defines several important group properties, providing examples for each one.

Prerequisites

A basic knowledge of group theory, such as would be taught in typical first course on the subject.

Note iconIncomplete This article is incomplete. Properties to include: simple, torsion, solvable, perfect. What other properties are worth including? I plan to organize a table at the end showing, for each set of properties, a (nontrivial) group or family of groups satisfying that exact set of properties.

Abelian groups

A group G is abelian if the group operation is commutative; i.e., if gh = hg for all g,h \in G. When a group is abelian, the operation is generally written additively as g + h instead of multiplicatively as gh, and the identity is denoted as 0 instead of 1. A group that fails to be abelian is called nonabelian.

Example 1

The integers \Z with the usual addition operation form an abelian group. The same is true for any of the familiar number systems (\Q, \R, and \C).

Example 2

Since an element of a group commutes with all powers of itself, and a cyclic group consists of all the powers of a single element, it follows that cyclic groups are always abelian.

Example 3

The group of invertible 2 \times 2 matrices with real entries forms a group under multiplication that is nonabelian.