Class Equation

Class Equation

Introduction

The Class Equation is a powerful numerical tool that reveals deep information about the structure of finite groups. It arises from applying the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem to the conjugation action of a group on itself.

Definition

A particularly insightful application of the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem arises when a group G acts on itself by conjugation. The action is defined by gx=gxg1 for g,xG.

Conjugacy Classes

Applying the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem

Applying the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem to this action yields |cl(x)|=[G:CG(x)].

Partitioning the Group

The set G is partitioned by its conjugacy classes. We can separate the elements whose conjugacy class has size 1. These are the elements for which gxg1=x for all gG, which is precisely the definition of the center of the group, Z(G).

The Class Equation

Summing the sizes of all the distinct conjugacy classes gives the order of the group:

|G|=i=1k|cl(xi)|

where x1,,xk are representatives from each distinct conjugacy class. By separating the center, we arrive at the Class Equation:

|G|=|Z(G)|+j=1m[G:CG(yj)]

where y1,,ym are representatives from the distinct conjugacy classes of size greater than 1.

Examples

Example 1: Class Equation for S3

Consider the symmetric group S3 of order 6. The conjugacy classes are:

The center Z(S3)={e}, so the class equation is:

6=1+3+2

Example 2: Class Equation for D4

Consider the dihedral group D4 of order 8. The conjugacy classes are:

The center Z(D4)={e,r2}, so the class equation is:

8=2+2+2+2

Example 3: p-Group Example

Consider a group G of order p2 where p is prime. By the class equation, |Z(G)| must be divisible by p. Since Z(G)G, we have |Z(G)|=p or |Z(G)|=p2. If |Z(G)|=p2, then G is abelian. If |Z(G)|=p, then G/Z(G) has order p and is therefore cyclic, which implies that G is abelian. Therefore, every group of order p2 is abelian.

Applications

Application 1: p-Groups Have Non-trivial Centers

The Class Equation is a powerful numerical tool. Since each term [G:CG(yj)] must divide |G|, it imposes strong constraints on the structure of a finite group.

A famous consequence is that any group whose order is a power of a prime p (a p-group) must have a non-trivial center. This is because |G| and each index [G:CG(yj)] are powers of p, so for the equation to balance, |Z(G)| must also be divisible by p.

Application 2: Understanding Group Structure

The Class Equation helps us understand the internal structure of groups by revealing information about conjugacy classes and centralizers.

Application 3: Proving Simplicity

The Class Equation can be used to prove that certain groups are simple by showing that they cannot have non-trivial normal subgroups.

Application 4: Sylow Theorems

The Class Equation is fundamental in the proof of the Sylow theorems, particularly in establishing the existence of Sylow subgroups.

Properties

Divisibility Constraints

Each term [G:CG(yj)] in the class equation must divide |G|, providing strong constraints on possible group structures.

Center Size

The size of the center |Z(G)| must be a divisor of |G| and must be at least 1 (since the identity is always in the center).

Abelian Groups

For abelian groups, all conjugacy classes have size 1, so the class equation becomes |G|=|Z(G)|=|G|.