Stabilizers

Stabilizers

Introduction

When a group acts on a set, the stabilizer of an element consists of all group elements that fix that element. Stabilizers are fundamental to understanding group actions and provide crucial information about the group's structure.

Definition

Definition 6.1: Let a group G act on a set X. The stabilizer of an element xX is the set of all elements in G that fix x. It is a subgroup of G, denoted StabG(x) or Gx:

StabG(x)={gGgx=x}

Key Properties

Subgroup Property

The stabilizer of any element is a subgroup of G. This follows from:

Relationship to Orbits

Stabilizers are fundamentally linked to orbits through the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem.

Examples

Example 1: Natural Action of S3

Consider the natural action of S3 on {1,2,3}:

Example 2: Action of D4 on Vertices

Consider the action of D4 on the vertices of a square:

Example 3: Conjugation Action

When a group G acts on itself by conjugation:

Example 4: Left Multiplication Action

When a group G acts on itself by left multiplication:

Applications

Application 1: Understanding Group Structure

Stabilizers help us understand the internal structure of groups by revealing which elements fix particular points.

Application 2: Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem

Stabilizers are essential for the Orbit-Stabilizer Theorem, which relates orbit size to stabilizer index.

Application 3: Class Equation

When studying conjugation actions, stabilizers (centralizers) lead to the Class Equation.

Application 4: Counting Problems

Stabilizers are crucial in counting problems involving symmetry, particularly in combinatorics.

Special Cases

Trivial Stabilizer

If StabG(x)={e} for all xX, the action is called free.

Full Stabilizer

If StabG(x)=G for some xX, then x is a fixed point of the action.

Normal Subgroup

If N is a normal subgroup of G, then N is the stabilizer of the identity coset in the action of G on G/N.