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
Properties
The class of solvable groups is closed under taking subgroups, quotients, and extensions. That is, if
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
Example 3: Symmetric Groups
The symmetric group
The symmetric group
Example 4: Dihedral Groups
The dihedral group
(the subgroup generated by the rotation by 180°)
So the derived series is
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
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
- All abelian groups
- The dihedral groups
- The symmetric groups
for