Solvable Groups

Solvable Groups

Introduction

The concept of a solvable group originated in Galois's work on the solvability of polynomial equations by radicals. Solvable groups are those that can be built from abelian groups through a series of extensions.

Definition

Definition 8.3: A group G is solvable if its derived series terminates in the trivial subgroup, i.e., G(n)={e} for some integer n. An equivalent definition is that G has a subnormal series with abelian factors.

Properties

The class of solvable groups is closed under taking subgroups, quotients, and extensions. That is, if NG, then G is solvable if and only if both N and G/N are solvable.

Examples

Example 1: Abelian Groups

All abelian groups are solvable (their derived series terminates at the first step).

Example 2: Finite p-Groups

All finite p-groups are solvable.

Example 3: Symmetric Groups

The symmetric group Sn is solvable for n4, but not for n5.

The symmetric group S5 is not solvable because its derived series is S5A5A5, which never reaches the trivial group since A5 is simple and non-abelian (and thus a perfect group, with [A5,A5]=A5).

Example 4: Dihedral Groups

The dihedral group Dn is solvable for all n. For example, in D4:

So the derived series is D4r2{e}, showing that D4 is solvable.

Connection to Galois Theory

The connection to Galois theory is profound: a polynomial equation is solvable by radicals if and only if its Galois group is a solvable group.

This is why there is no general formula for solving quintic equations by radicals—the Galois group of a general quintic is S5, which is not solvable.

Applications

Application 1: Galois Theory

The concept of solvable groups is fundamental to Galois theory. A polynomial equation is solvable by radicals if and only if its Galois group is solvable.

Application 2: Group Classification

Solvable groups are important in the classification of finite groups. Many important families of groups are solvable.

Application 3: Structure Analysis

Understanding solvable groups helps us understand the structure of more complex groups.

Metabelian Groups

A group G is metabelian if G={e} (i.e., the second derived subgroup is trivial). Metabelian groups are solvable groups that are "close" to being abelian. Examples include: