A group is a set together with an associative operation that admits an identity element and such that there exists an inverse for every element.
Throughout this glossary, we use to denote the identity element of a group.
Both subgroups and normal subgroups of a given group form a complete lattice under inclusion of subsets; this property and some related results are described by the lattice theorem.
Kernel of a group homomorphism. It is the preimage of the identity in the codomain of a group homomorphism. Every normal subgroup is the kernel of a group homomorphism and vice versa.
Direct product, direct sum, and semidirect product of groups. These are ways of combining groups to construct new groups; please refer to the corresponding links for explanation.
Finitely generated group. If there exists a finite set such that, then is said to be finitely generated. If can be taken to have just one element, is a cyclic group of finite order, an infinite cyclic group, or possibly a group with just one element.
Simple group. Simple groups are those groups having only and themselves as normal subgroups. The name is misleading because a simple group can in fact be very complex. An example is the monster group, whose order is about 1054. Every finite group is built up from simple groups via group extensions, so the study of finite simple groups is central to the study of all finite groups. The finite simple groups are known and classified.
The structure of any finite abelian group is relatively simple; every finite abelian group is the direct sum of cyclic p-groups.This can be extended to a complete classification of all finitely generated abelian groups, that is all abelian groups that are generated by a finite set.
The situation is much more complicated for the non-abelian groups.
Free group. Given any set, one can define a group as the smallest group containing the free semigroup of . The group consists of the finite strings (words) that can be composed by elements from, together with other elements that are necessary to form a group. Multiplication of strings is defined by concatenation, for instance .
Every group is basically a factor group of a free group generated by . Refer to Presentation of a group for more explanation.One can then ask algorithmic questions about these presentations, such as:
The general case of this is the word problem, and several of these questions are in fact unsolvable by any general algorithm.
General linear group, denoted by, is the group of -by- invertible matrices, where the elements of the matrices are taken from a field such as the real numbers or the complex numbers.
Group representation (not to be confused with the presentation of a group). A group representation is a homomorphism from a group to a general linear group. One basically tries to "represent" a given abstract group as a concrete group of invertible matrices, which is much easier to study.