Nilpotent Groups
Nilpotent Groups
Introduction
Nilpotent groups are a special subclass of solvable groups that are "almost abelian." They have a more constrained structure than solvable groups, making them closer to abelian groups.
Definition
Definition 8.4: A group
Alternatively, a group is nilpotent if its lower central series terminates at
Properties
- All nilpotent groups are solvable, but the converse is not true (
is solvable but not nilpotent) - All finite
-groups are nilpotent - A key property of finite nilpotent groups is that they are the direct product of their Sylow subgroups
Nilpotent groups have a more constrained structure than solvable groups, making them closer to abelian groups. For example, in a finite nilpotent group, any two elements with relatively prime orders must commute.
Examples
Example 1: Abelian Groups
All abelian groups are both solvable and nilpotent. For an abelian group
Example 2: p-Groups
All finite
Example 3: Direct Products
The direct product of nilpotent groups is nilpotent.
Example 4: Non-Nilpotent Solvable Groups
The symmetric group
- But the upper central series never reaches
Applications
Application 1: Group Classification
Nilpotent groups are important in the classification of finite groups. Many important families of groups (such as
Application 2: Representation Theory
Nilpotent groups have particularly nice properties in representation theory. For example, all irreducible representations of a finite nilpotent group are monomial (induced from one-dimensional representations of subgroups).
Application 3: Structure Analysis
The constrained structure of nilpotent groups makes them easier to analyze than general solvable groups.
Supersolvable Groups
A group