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Normal subgroup

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
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2020 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 20-XX [MSN][ZBL]


A normal subgrup (also: normal divisor, invariant subgroup) is a subgroup of a group G for which the left decomposition of G modulo H is the same as the right one; in other words, a subgroup such that for any element a\in G the cosets aH and Ha are the same (as sets). In this case one also says that H is normal in G and writes H\trianglelefteq G; if also H\ne G, one writes H\triangleleft G. A subgroup H is normal in G if and only if it contains all G-conjugates of any of its elements (see Conjugate elements), that is H^G\subseteq H. A normal subgroup can also be defined as one that coincides with all its conjugates, as a consequence of which it is also known as a self-conjugate subgroup.

For any homomorphism \varphi:F\to G^* the set K of elements of G that are mapped to the unit element of G^* (the kernel of the homomorphism \varphi) is a normal subgroup of G, and conversely, every normal subgroup of G is the kernel of some homomorphism; in particular, K is the kernel of the canonical homomorphism onto the quotient group G/K.

The intersection of any set of normal subgroups is normal, and the subgroup generated by any system of normal subgroups of G is normal in G.


Comments

A subgroup H of a group G is normal if g^{-1}Hg = H for all g\in G, or, equivalently, if the normalizer N_G(H) = G, cf. Normalizer of a subset. A normal subgroup is also called an invariant subgroup because it is invariant under the inner automorphisms x\mapsto x^g=g^{-1}xg, g\in G, of G. A subgroup that is invariant under all automorphisms is called a fully-invariant subgroup or characteristic subgroup. A subgroup that is invariant under all endomorphisms is a fully-characteristic subgroup.

References

[CuRe] C.W. Curtis, I. Reiner, "Representation theory of finite groups and associative algebras", Interscience (1962) pp. 5 MR0144979 Zbl 0131.25601
[Ha] M. Hall jr., "The theory of groups", Macmillan (1959) pp. 26 MR0103215 Zbl 0084.02202
[Ku] A.G. Kurosh, "The theory of groups", 1, Chelsea (1955) pp. Chapt. III (Translated from Russian) MR0071422
How to Cite This Entry:
Normal subgroup. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Normal_subgroup&oldid=21582
This article was adapted from an original article by O.A. Ivanova (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article