Subgroup
Definition
A subgroup of a group is a subset of such that itself is a group under the same binary operation defined on .
If is a group with operation , then a nonempty subset is a subgroup if:
- For all , the element
- For every , the inverse
Equivalently, is a subgroup if it is nonempty and closed under the operation and inverses.
A commonly used compact test is:
- For all ,
This is called the subgroup test.
Example:
- Let , the group of integers under addition.
- Let .
- Then is a subgroup of because the sum of even integers is even and the additive inverse of an even integer is also even.
Main Content
1. First Concept: Basic Properties of Subgroups
- A subgroup must contain the identity element of the parent group. This is automatic once the set is nonempty and closed under the subgroup condition.
- Every element in a subgroup must have its inverse inside the subgroup, so the subgroup is closed under “undoing” the group operation.
A few important consequences follow from the definition:
- If is a subgroup of , then the operation on is simply the same operation as in , restricted to elements of .
- A subgroup is itself a group, so it satisfies associativity, identity, and inverse properties.
- The smallest subgroup of any group is the trivial subgroup , where is the identity element.
Example:
- In , the subset is a subgroup because , and the inverse of is .
Another example:
- In the multiplicative group of nonzero real numbers , the set of positive real numbers is a subgroup because:
- the product of positive numbers is positive,
- the inverse of a positive number is positive,
- is included.
2. Second Concept: Subgroup Test
- To check whether a subset is a subgroup, it is usually enough to verify the subgroup test rather than checking all group axioms separately.
- The most efficient form is: a nonempty subset of is a subgroup if for all , the element also lies in .
Why this works:
- Closure under implies closure under inverses and the operation itself.
- If , then by taking or using the subgroup structure carefully, one can derive the identity and inverses.
This test is especially useful when working with concrete sets.
Example:
- Let and .
- If , then .
- Since the operation is addition, the subgroup test becomes: if , then , which is true.
- Hence is a subgroup of under addition.
Non-example:
- The set of positive integers under addition is not a subgroup of because it does not contain inverses. For example, is in the set, but is not.
3. Third Concept: Types and Examples of Subgroups
- Subgroups can be classified in several useful ways, such as trivial subgroup, proper subgroup, cyclic subgroup, and normal subgroup.
- Different examples help illustrate how subgroup ideas appear in arithmetic, geometry, and symmetry.
Important types:
Trivial subgroup
- The subgroup containing only the identity element.
- Example: in
Improper subgroup
- The entire group is also always a subgroup of itself.
- Example: is a subgroup of
Proper subgroup
- Any subgroup such that .
- Example: is a proper subgroup of
Cyclic subgroup
- Generated by a single element , written
- It consists of all powers of in multiplicative groups or all integer multiples of in additive groups.
- Example: In , the subgroup generated by is
Normal subgroup
- A subgroup with an additional symmetry condition important in quotient groups.
- Although every normal subgroup is a subgroup, not every subgroup is normal.
A simple relationship diagram:
Group G
├── Trivial subgroup {e}
├── Proper subgroups
│ ├── Cyclic subgroups
│ └── Other subgroups
└── The whole group G
This shows that a group contains many possible subgroups, each revealing structure inside the larger system.
Working / Process
1. Identify the parent group
- First determine the group you are working within, including its operation.
- Example: , , or a symmetry group.
2. Select the subset
- Choose the subset you want to test.
- Make sure you understand exactly which elements are included.
3. Apply the subgroup test
- Check that the subset is nonempty.
- Verify closure under the operation and inverses, or use the compact test .
- If the test fails, the subset is not a subgroup; if it passes, it is a subgroup.
Example process:
- Let inside
- This is not a subgroup because:
- it is not closed under addition inverses
- if , then , so the inverse is not in
Another example:
- Let inside
- is nonempty because
- If and , then
- Therefore is a subgroup
Advantages / Applications
- Subgroups simplify the study of large groups by isolating smaller structures that are easier to analyze.
- They are essential in understanding symmetry, including geometric symmetries, permutations, and transformation groups.
- Subgroups are the foundation for advanced topics such as cosets, quotient groups, group homomorphisms, and the classification of algebraic structures.
Additional applications include:
Number theory
- Subgroups help describe divisibility patterns and modular arithmetic.
Physics and chemistry
- Symmetry subgroups are used to study molecular symmetry and conservation laws.
Computer science
- Group-based methods appear in cryptography, coding theory, and algorithmic symmetry detection.
Geometry
- Rotation and reflection subgroups explain shapes and motions.
Examples in application:
- The rotational symmetries of a square form a subgroup of its full symmetry group.
- The set of even integers forms a subgroup that is useful in modular arithmetic and parity arguments.
- Subgroups of permutation groups help model rearrangements and combinatorial structures.
Summary
- A subgroup is a subset of a group that is itself a group under the same operation.
- The subgroup test provides a fast way to verify whether a subset is a subgroup.
- Common examples include trivial, proper, cyclic, and normal subgroups.
- Important terms to remember: group, subgroup, identity element, inverse, closure, subgroup test, cyclic subgroup, normal subgroup