Group Homomorphisms

Group Homomorphisms

Introduction

A homomorphism is a map between groups that preserves the group structure. Homomorphisms are fundamental to understanding the relationships between groups and are essential for the isomorphism theorems.

Definition

A homomorphism is a map ϕ:GH between two groups that preserves the group structure, meaning ϕ(g1g2)=ϕ(g1)ϕ(g2) for all g1,g2G.

Important Sets Associated with Homomorphisms

Two important sets associated with a homomorphism are:

1. Kernel

The kernel of ϕ is the set of elements in G that map to the identity in H:

ker(ϕ)={gGϕ(g)=eH}

Properties:

2. Image

The image of ϕ is the set of elements in H that are mapped to by some element in G:

Im(ϕ)={ϕ(g)gG}

Properties:

Examples

Example 1: Homomorphism from Z to Z6

Consider the homomorphism ϕ:ZZ6 defined by ϕ(n)=nmod6.

Example 2: Homomorphism from R to R

Consider the homomorphism ϕ:RR defined by ϕ(x)=x2.

Example 3: Homomorphism from Sn to {±1}

Consider the sign homomorphism sgn:Sn{±1}.

Example 4: Homomorphism from GLn(R) to R

Consider the determinant homomorphism det:GLn(R)R.

Properties

Basic Properties

  1. Identity preservation: ϕ(eG)=eH
  2. Inverse preservation: ϕ(g1)=ϕ(g)1
  3. Power preservation: ϕ(gn)=ϕ(g)n for all nZ

Composition

If ϕ:GH and ψ:HK are homomorphisms, then ψϕ:GK is also a homomorphism.

Restriction

If ϕ:GH is a homomorphism and S is a subgroup of G, then the restriction ϕ|S:SH is a homomorphism.

Types of Homomorphisms

Monomorphism

A homomorphism that is injective (one-to-one).

Epimorphism

A homomorphism that is surjective (onto).

Isomorphism

A homomorphism that is bijective (both injective and surjective).

Endomorphism

A homomorphism from a group to itself.

Automorphism

An isomorphism from a group to itself.

Applications

Application 1: Understanding Group Structure

Homomorphisms help us understand the structure of groups by relating them to other groups.

Application 2: First Isomorphism Theorem

Homomorphisms are essential for the first isomorphism theorem, which states that G/ker(ϕ)Im(ϕ).

Application 3: Group Actions

Homomorphisms are fundamental to the study of group actions, where a group acts on a set.

Application 4: Representation Theory

Homomorphisms into matrix groups are the basis of representation theory.