Alternating Groups
Alternating Groups
Introduction
The alternating groups are a critical family of simple groups. They are fundamental to understanding the structure of symmetric groups and have profound implications for Galois theory.
Definition
Definition 4.2:
- A permutation is even if it can be written as a product of an even number of transpositions (2-cycles). It is odd otherwise.
- The sign of a permutation
, denoted , is if is even and if is odd. - The map
is a group homomorphism. - The alternating group
is the kernel of this homomorphism.
Properties
As the kernel of a homomorphism,
Structural Properties
The structural properties of alternating groups are fundamental to the entire theory:
Abelian Property
Simplicity of
Simplicity for
Theorem 4.3: The alternating group
Examples
Example 1:
The alternating group
(identity) (3-cycle) (3-cycle)
Example 2:
The alternating group
- The identity
- All 3-cycles:
, , , , , , , - Products of two disjoint transpositions:
, ,
Example 3:
The alternating group
- The identity
- All 3-cycles (20 elements)
- All 5-cycles (24 elements)
- Products of two disjoint transpositions (15 elements)
Historical Significance
The simplicity of
A group is called "solvable" if its composition factors are all abelian (specifically, cyclic of prime order). Since
The Galois group of a general quintic polynomial is
The factors are:
(not abelian) (abelian)
Because the factor
Applications
Application 1: Galois Theory
The simplicity of
Application 2: Group Classification
Alternating groups are fundamental examples of simple groups and are essential to the classification of finite simple groups.
Application 3: Symmetry
Alternating groups represent the "even" symmetries of objects, which are often more fundamental than the full symmetric group.
Application 4: Combinatorics
Alternating groups are important in combinatorics, particularly in the study of permutations and their properties.