Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Permutation group

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
Revision as of 17:12, 7 February 2011 by 127.0.0.1 (talk) (Importing text file)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

A set of permutations (cf. Permutation of a set) of a set that form a group under the operation of multiplication (composition) of permutations. In other words, a permutation group is a pair , where is a group and is a set, and each corresponds to a transformation of such that 1) , , ; and 2) for all if and only if is the identity element of . If only condition 1) is fulfilled, one speaks of an action (or a representation) of on . In that case the subset of elements of that leave invariant all will be a normal subgroup of (called the kernel of the action), and the quotient group acts on as a permutation group. If is a finite set, then a permutation group is called finite, otherwise infinite. The set of all permutations on is called the symmetric group on , and is denoted by , or if .

A similarity (or isomorphism) from a permutation group onto a permutation group is a pair of mappings, where is an isomorphism from onto and is a bijection from onto , where the two mappings fit in the sense that for all and one has . Permutation groups between which there is a similarity are called similar. If is a permutation group, there is a naturally defined equivalence on the set : , , if and only if for some ; the equivalence classes of a permutation group are called orbits or sets of transitivity of the group . A permutation group is transitive if it has only one orbit, while otherwise it is called intransitive. (See Transitive group.)

Any abstract group can be represented as a permutation group on a suitable set (Cayley's theorem). Here as one may take the set of all elements of and put each into correspondence with the mapping obtained by multiplication on the right by that element : . The resulting regular representation of as a permutation group is not the only one possible. In research on permutation groups one is interested in properties different from those of interest in research on abstract groups. One is concerned not only with the group structure but primarily with how the group acts on the set ; for example, the property of transitivity is a property of permutation groups, not of abstract groups.

Let be a permutation group and a subset of . The set of all permutations that map into itself (i.e. ) forms a subgroup , called the stabilizer of the set . The set of those permutations that leave invariant all individual is called the pointwise stabilizer (or fixator) of the set and is denoted by . The pointwise stabilizer is a normal subgroup of the stabilizer. If is a one-element set, the concepts of stabilizer and pointwise stabilizer coincide (the result is denoted by ). A permutation group is called semi-regular (or freely acting) if the stabilizer of each point is the identity group and regular (or simply transitive) if the group is also transitive. The centralizer of a permutation group is defined as the centralizer of in the symmetric group , i.e. the set of permutations on that commute with the elements of . The centralizer of a transitive group is semi-regular, and, conversely, the centralizer of a semi-regular group is transitive. A regular permutation group is similar to the above-described regular representation of the group . The centralizer of the regular representation is the so-called left regular representation of , which associates with the element the permutation , .

There are operations, [6], that enable one to construct new permutation groups from given ones.

a) The sum of permutation groups. Let and be two permutation groups with empty intersection . The sum is defined as the permutation group consisting of the direct product acting on the union , where for , , ,

b) The product of two permutation groups and is the group acting on according to the formula .

The two operations are associative and may be defined for any number of groups.

c) The wreath product. Let and be two permutation groups and let denote a mapping from into . On the set of pairs , which are called tables, a multiplication is defined by:

with respect to which they form a group . The wreath product of the permutation groups and is the permutation group , where the action is defined by the formula

The wreath product is associative and may even be defined for any totally ordered family of permutation groups. The wreath product of non-identity permutation groups is an imprimitive group. If and are taken in the guise of their regular representations, this concept coincides apart from the order of the factors with the usual group-theoretic wreath product.

d) Exponentiation. The group of tables acting on the set leads to the permutation groups

where the action is defined as follows:

with . Exponentiation is not associative and usually yields primitive groups, since is primitive if is a primitive non-cyclic group.

Permutation groups arise usually as groups of permutations preserving certain relations or operations on a set (see also Transformation group). For example, one source of the theory of permutation groups was the concept of the Galois group of a polynomial. If

is a polynomial with coefficients in some field and are the roots in some extension field, then the Galois group is the group of permutations of the set that preserve rational relations between the roots, i.e. equations of the form

where . E. Galois showed that the properties of this group govern the solvability of the equation in radicals. This result led to developments in the theory of permutation groups by Galois, J. Serret, C. Jordan, and others. Further developments at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the 20th century were due to W. Burnside, W. Manning, G. Frobenius, O.Yu. Schmidt, and I. Schur. Permutation groups have many applications in discrete mathematics, for example in the classification of Boolean functions and finite automata, as well as in the theory of error-correcting codes and in counting the isomers of complicated organic compounds.

References

[1] D. Passman, "Permutation groups" , Benjamin (1968)
[2] H. Wielandt, "Finite permutation groups" , Acad. Press (1968) (Translated from German)
[3] W. Burnside, "Theory of groups of finite order" , Dover, reprint (1955) (Translated from German)
[4] L.A. Kaluzhnin, V.I. Sushchanskii, "Transformations and permutations" , Moscow (1979) (In Ukrainian)
[5] M. Hall, "Group theory" , Macmillan (1959)
[6] L.A. Kaluzhnin, M.Kh. Klin, V.I. Sushchanskii, "Exponentiation of permutation groups I" Izv. Vyssch. Uchebn. Zaved. Mat. : 8 (1979) pp. 26–33 (In Russian)
How to Cite This Entry:
Permutation group. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Permutation_group&oldid=15324
This article was adapted from an original article by L.A. Kaluzhnin (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article