In mathematics, a group is a set with an operation that associates an element of the set to every pair of elements of the set (as does every binary operation) and satisfies the following constraints: the operation is associative, it has an identity element, and every element of the set has an inverse element.
Many mathematical structures are groups endowed with other properties. For example, the integers with the addition operation form an infinite group, which is generated by a single element called (these properties characterize the integers in a unique way).
The concept of a group was elaborated for handling, in a unified way, many mathematical structures such as numbers, geometric shapes and polynomial roots. Because the concept of groups is ubiquitous in numerous areas both within and outside mathematics, some authors consider it as a central organizing principle of contemporary mathematics.
In geometry, groups arise naturally in the study of symmetries and geometric transformations: The symmetries of an object form a group, called the symmetry group of the object, and the transformations of a given type form a general group. Lie groups appear in symmetry groups in geometry, and also in the Standard Model of particle physics. The Poincaré group is a Lie group consisting of the symmetries of spacetime in special relativity. Point groups describe symmetry in molecular chemistry.
The concept of a group arose in the study of polynomial equations, starting with Évariste Galois in the 1830s, who introduced the term group (French: French: groupe) for the symmetry group of the roots of an equation, now called a Galois group. After contributions from other fields such as number theory and geometry, the group notion was generalized and firmly established around 1870. Modern group theory—an active mathematical discipline—studies groups in their own right. To explore groups, mathematicians have devised various notions to break groups into smaller, better-understandable pieces, such as subgroups, quotient groups and simple groups. In addition to their abstract properties, group theorists also study the different ways in which a group can be expressed concretely, both from a point of view of representation theory (that is, through the representations of the group) and of computational group theory. A theory has been developed for finite groups, which culminated with the classification of finite simple groups, completed in 2004. Since the mid-1980s, geometric group theory, which studies finitely generated groups as geometric objects, has become an active area in group theory.
One of the more familiar groups is the set of integers together with addition. For any two integers
a
a+b
+
b
a
b
c
a
b
a
0+a=a
b
a+b=0
b
a
The integers, together with the operation, form a mathematical object belonging to a broad class sharing similar structural aspects. To appropriately understand these structures as a collective, the following definition is developed.
G
a
b
G
e
G
a
Such an element is unique (see below). It is called the identity element (or sometimes neutral element) of the group.
a
b
G
a ⋅ b=e
e
For each, the element
b
a
Formally, a group is an ordered pair of a set and a binary operation on this set that satisfies the group axioms. The set is called the underlying set of the group, and the operation is called the group operation or the group law.
A group and its underlying set are thus two different mathematical objects. To avoid cumbersome notation, it is common to abuse notation by using the same symbol to denote both. This reflects also an informal way of thinking: that the group is the same as the set except that it has been enriched by additional structure provided by the operation.
For example, consider the set of real numbers, which has the operations of addition
a+b
\R
(\R,+)
(\R,+, ⋅ )
\R
The additive group of the field
\R
\R
\R
\R x
\R\smallsetminus\{0\}
More generally, one speaks of an additive group whenever the group operation is notated as addition; in this case, the identity is typically denoted, and the inverse of an element
x
x
ab
The definition of a group does not require that
a ⋅ b=b ⋅ a
a
b
Several other notations are commonly used for groups whose elements are not numbers. For a group whose elements are functions, the operation is often function composition ; then the identity may be denoted id. In the more specific cases of geometric transformation groups, symmetry groups, permutation groups, and automorphism groups, the symbol
\circ
Two figures in the plane are congruent if one can be changed into the other using a combination of rotations, reflections, and translations. Any figure is congruent to itself. However, some figures are congruent to themselves in more than one way, and these extra congruences are called symmetries. A square has eight symmetries. These are:
r2
These symmetries are functions. Each sends a point in the square to the corresponding point under the symmetry. For example,
r1
fh
a
b
b\circa
b
A Cayley table lists the results of all such compositions possible. For example, rotating by 270° clockwise and then reflecting horizontally is the same as performing a reflection along the diagonal . Using the above symbols, highlighted in blue in the Cayley table:
\circ | id | r1 | r2 | r3 | fv | fh | fd | fc | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
id | id | r1 | r2 | r3 | fv | fh | fd | fc | |
r1 | r1 | r2 | r3 | id | fc | fd | fv | fh | |
r2 | r2 | r3 | id | r1 | fh | fv | fc | fd | |
r3 | r3 | id | r1 | r2 | fd | fc | fh | fv | |
fv | fv | fd | fh | fc | id | r2 | r1 | r3 | |
fh | fh | fc | fv | fd | "style=background:#FFFC93;" | r2 | id | r3 | r1 |
fd | fd | fh | fc | fv | r3 | r1 | id | r2 | |
fc | fc | fv | fd | fh | r1 | r3 | r2 | id | |
The elements,,, and form a subgroup whose Cayley table is highlighted in red (upper left region). A left and right coset of this subgroup are highlighted in green (in the last row) and yellow (last column), respectively. The result of the composition, the symmetry, is highlighted in blue (below table center). |
Binary operation: Composition is a binary operation. That is,
a\circb
a
Associativity: The associativity axiom deals with composing more than two symmetries: Starting with three elements, and of, there are two possible ways of using these three symmetries in this order to determine a symmetry of the square. One of these ways is to first compose
a
b
b
(fd\circfv)\circr2=fd\circ(fv\circr2)
Identity element: The identity element is, as it does not change any symmetry
a
Inverse element: Each symmetry has an inverse:, the reflections,,, and the 180° rotation
r2
r3
r1
In contrast to the group of integers above, where the order of the operation is immaterial, it does matter in, as, for example,
fh\circr1=fc
D4
See main article: History of group theory. The modern concept of an abstract group developed out of several fields of mathematics. The original motivation for group theory was the quest for solutions of polynomial equations of degree higher than 4. The 19th-century French mathematician Évariste Galois, extending prior work of Paolo Ruffini and Joseph-Louis Lagrange, gave a criterion for the solvability of a particular polynomial equation in terms of the symmetry group of its roots (solutions). The elements of such a Galois group correspond to certain permutations of the roots. At first, Galois's ideas were rejected by his contemporaries, and published only posthumously. More general permutation groups were investigated in particular by Augustin Louis Cauchy. Arthur Cayley's On the theory of groups, as depending on the symbolic equation
\thetan=1
Geometry was a second field in which groups were used systematically, especially symmetry groups as part of Felix Klein's 1872 Erlangen program. After novel geometries such as hyperbolic and projective geometry had emerged, Klein used group theory to organize them in a more coherent way. Further advancing these ideas, Sophus Lie founded the study of Lie groups in 1884.
The third field contributing to group theory was number theory. Certain abelian group structures had been used implicitly in Carl Friedrich Gauss's number-theoretical work Disquisitiones Arithmeticae (1798), and more explicitly by Leopold Kronecker. In 1847, Ernst Kummer made early attempts to prove Fermat's Last Theorem by developing groups describing factorization into prime numbers.
The convergence of these various sources into a uniform theory of groups started with Camille Jordan's French: Traité des substitutions et des équations algébriques (1870). Walther von Dyck (1882) introduced the idea of specifying a group by means of generators and relations, and was also the first to give an axiomatic definition of an "abstract group", in the terminology of the time. As of the 20th century, groups gained wide recognition by the pioneering work of Ferdinand Georg Frobenius and William Burnside (who worked on representation theory of finite groups), Richard Brauer's modular representation theory and Issai Schur's papers. The theory of Lie groups, and more generally locally compact groups was studied by Hermann Weyl, Élie Cartan and many others. Its algebraic counterpart, the theory of algebraic groups, was first shaped by Claude Chevalley (from the late 1930s) and later by the work of Armand Borel and Jacques Tits.
The University of Chicago's 1960–61 Group Theory Year brought together group theorists such as Daniel Gorenstein, John G. Thompson and Walter Feit, laying the foundation of a collaboration that, with input from numerous other mathematicians, led to the classification of finite simple groups, with the final step taken by Aschbacher and Smith in 2004. This project exceeded previous mathematical endeavours by its sheer size, in both length of proof and number of researchers. Research concerning this classification proof is ongoing. Group theory remains a highly active mathematical branch, impacting many other fields, as the examples below illustrate.
Basic facts about all groups that can be obtained directly from the group axioms are commonly subsumed under elementary group theory. For example, repeated applications of the associativity axiom show that the unambiguity ofgeneralizes to more than three factors. Because this implies that parentheses can be inserted anywhere within such a series of terms, parentheses are usually omitted.
The group axioms imply that the identity element is unique; that is, there exists only one identity element: any two identity elements
e
f
The group axioms also imply that the inverse of each element is unique: Let a group element
a
b
c
\begin{align} b&=b ⋅ e&&(eistheidentityelement)\\ &=b ⋅ (a ⋅ c)&&(cisaninverse)\\ &=(b ⋅ a) ⋅ c&&(associativity)\\ &=e ⋅ c&&(bisaninverse)\\ &=c&&(eistheidentityelement) \end{align}
Therefore, it is customary to speak of the inverse of an element.
Divisiona
b
x
G
a
G
G\toG
x
a ⋅ x
a
Similarly, given
a
x ⋅ a=b
G\toG
x
x ⋅ a
a
The group axioms for identity and inverses may be "weakened" to assert only the existence of a left identity and left inverses. From these one-sided axioms, one can prove that the left identity is also a right identity and a left inverse is also a right inverse for the same element. Since they define exactly the same structures as groups, collectively the axioms are not weaker.
In particular, assuming associativity and the existence of a left identity
e
f-1
f
\begin{align} f ⋅ f-1&=e ⋅ (f ⋅ f-1)&&(leftidentity)\\ &=((f-1)-1 ⋅ f-1) ⋅ (f ⋅ f-1) &&(leftinverse)\\ &=(f-1)-1 ⋅ ((f-1 ⋅ f) ⋅ f-1) &&(associativity)\\ &=(f-1)-1 ⋅ (e ⋅ f-1) &&(leftinverse)\\ &=(f-1)-1 ⋅ f-1&&(leftidentity)\\ &=e &&(leftinverse) \end{align}
Similarly, the left identity is also a right identity:
\begin{align} f ⋅ e&=f ⋅ (f-1 ⋅ f) &&(leftinverse)\\ &=(f ⋅ f-1) ⋅ f &&(associativity)\\ &=e ⋅ f &&(rightinverse)\\ &=f &&(leftidentity) \end{align}
These proofs require all three axioms (associativity, existence of left identity and existence of left inverse). For a structure with a looser definition (like a semigroup) one may have, for example, that a left identity is not necessarily a right identity.
The same result can be obtained by only assuming the existence of a right identity and a right inverse.
However, only assuming the existence of a left identity and a right inverse (or vice versa) is not sufficient to define a group. For example, consider the set
G=\{e,f\}
⋅
e ⋅ e=f ⋅ e=e
e
(G, ⋅ )
When studying sets, one uses concepts such as subset, function, and quotient by an equivalence relation. When studying groups, one uses instead subgroups, homomorphisms, and quotient groups. These are the analogues that take the group structure into account.
See main article: Group homomorphism. Group homomorphisms are functions that respect group structure; they may be used to relate two groups. A homomorphism from a group
(G, ⋅ )
(H,*)
\varphi:G\toH
\varphi
\varphi(a-1)=\varphi(a)-1
a
The identity homomorphism of a group
G
\iotaG:G\toG
G
\varphi:G\toH
\psi:H\toG
\psi\circ\varphi=\iotaG
\psil(\varphi(g)r)=g
g
G
\varphil(\psi(h)r)=h
h
G
H
H
G
G
The collection of all groups, together with the homomorphisms between them, form a category, the category of groups.
An injective homomorphism
\phi:G'\toG
G' \stackrel{\sim}{\to} H\hookrightarrowG
See main article: Subgroup. Informally, a subgroup is a group
H
G
h1
h2
h1 ⋅ h2
G
H\toG
In the example of symmetries of a square, the identity and the rotations constitute a subgroup, highlighted in red in the Cayley table of the example: any two rotations composed are still a rotation, and a rotation can be undone by (i.e., is inverse to) the complementary rotations 270° for 90°, 180° for 180°, and 90° for 270°. The subgroup test provides a necessary and sufficient condition for a nonempty subset of a group to be a subgroup: it is sufficient to check that
g-1 ⋅ h\inH
g
h
Given any subset
S
S
S
G
r2
fv
See main article: Coset. In many situations it is desirable to consider two group elements the same if they differ by an element of a given subgroup. For example, in the symmetry group of a square, once any reflection is performed, rotations alone cannot return the square to its original position, so one can think of the reflected positions of the square as all being equivalent to each other, and as inequivalent to the unreflected positions; the rotation operations are irrelevant to the question whether a reflection has been performed. Cosets are used to formalize this insight: a subgroup
H
H
The left cosets of any subgroup
H
G
g1H=g2H
H
g
G
H
In, the group of symmetries of a square, with its subgroup
R
gR
g
R
U=fcR=\{fc,fd,fv,fh\}
R
fcR=U=Rfc
See main article: Quotient group. Suppose that
N
G/N
G\toG/N
g
gN
gN
hN
eN=N
gN
⋅ | R | U | |
---|---|---|---|
R | R | U | |
U | U | R |
D4/R
R
R=\{id,r1,r2,r3\}
D4/R
D4
D4
The first isomorphism theorem implies that any surjective homomorphism
\phi:G\toH
See main article: Presentation of a group. Every group is isomorphic to a quotient of a free group, in many ways.
For example, the dihedral group
D4
r1
fv
D4
\langler,f\rangle
D4
r
r1
f
\ker\phi
\ker\phi
\langler,f\rangle
D4
A presentation of a group can be used to construct the Cayley graph, a graphical depiction of a discrete group.
See main article: Examples of groups. thumb|right|A periodic wallpaper pattern gives rise to a wallpaper group.Examples and applications of groups abound. A starting point is the group
\Z
Groups are also applied in many other mathematical areas. Mathematical objects are often examined by associating groups to them and studying the properties of the corresponding groups. For example, Henri Poincaré founded what is now called algebraic topology by introducing the fundamental group. By means of this connection, topological properties such as proximity and continuity translate into properties of groups.
thumb|right|The fundamental group of a plane minus a point (bold) consists of loops around the missing point. This group is isomorphic to the integers under addition.Elements of the fundamental group of a topological space are equivalence classes of loops, where loops are considered equivalent if one can be smoothly deformed into another, and the group operation is "concatenation" (tracing one loop then the other). For example, as shown in the figure, if the topological space is the plane with one point removed, then loops which do not wrap around the missing point (blue) can be smoothly contracted to a single point and are the identity element of the fundamental group. A loop which wraps around the missing point
k
m
In more recent applications, the influence has also been reversed to motivate geometric constructions by a group-theoretical background. In a similar vein, geometric group theory employs geometric concepts, for example in the study of hyperbolic groups. Further branches crucially applying groups include algebraic geometry and number theory.[1]
In addition to the above theoretical applications, many practical applications of groups exist. Cryptography relies on the combination of the abstract group theory approach together with algorithmical knowledge obtained in computational group theory, in particular when implemented for finite groups. Applications of group theory are not restricted to mathematics; sciences such as physics, chemistry and computer science benefit from the concept.
Many number systems, such as the integers and the rationals, enjoy a naturally given group structure. In some cases, such as with the rationals, both addition and multiplication operations give rise to group structures. Such number systems are predecessors to more general algebraic structures known as rings and fields. Further abstract algebraic concepts such as modules, vector spaces and algebras also form groups.
The group of integers
\Z
\left(\Z, ⋅ \right)
a=2
a ⋅ b=1
\Z
The desire for the existence of multiplicative inverses suggests considering fractions
Fractions of integers (with
b
x
\left(\Q, ⋅ \right)
However, the set of all nonzero rational numbers
\Q\smallsetminus\left\{0\right\}=\left\{q\in\Q\midq ≠ 0\right\}
a/b
The rational numbers (including zero) also form a group under addition. Intertwining addition and multiplication operations yields more complicated structures called rings and – if division by other than zero is possible, such as in
\Q
See main article: Modular arithmetic.
Modular arithmetic for a modulus
n
a
b
n
0
0
Zn
0
n-a
A familiar example is addition of hours on the face of a clock, where 12 rather than 0 is chosen as the representative of the identity. If the hour hand is on
9
4
9+4
1
For any prime number, there is also the multiplicative group of integers modulo . Its elements can be represented by
1
16
5
p
a
b
p
b
\gcd(a,p)
p=5
4
3
\left(\Q\smallsetminus\left\{0\right\}, ⋅ \right)
\Z/p\Z
See main article: Cyclic group. A cyclic group is a group all of whose elements are powers of a particular element
a
a2
a-3
a
In the groups
(\Z/n\Z,+)
1
n
z
n
z
x | |
F | |
p |
p
3
Some cyclic groups have an infinite number of elements. In these groups, for every non-zero element, all the powers of
a
The study of finitely generated abelian groups is quite mature, including the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups; and reflecting this state of affairs, many group-related notions, such as center and commutator, describe the extent to which a given group is not abelian.
See main article: Symmetry group.
See also: Molecular symmetry, Space group, Point group and Symmetry in physics.
Symmetry groups are groups consisting of symmetries of given mathematical objects, principally geometric entities, such as the symmetry group of the square given as an introductory example above, although they also arise in algebra such as the symmetries among the roots of polynomial equations dealt with in Galois theory (see below). Conceptually, group theory can be thought of as the study of symmetry. Symmetries in mathematics greatly simplify the study of geometrical or analytical objects. A group is said to act on another mathematical object if every group element can be associated to some operation on and the composition of these operations follows the group law. For example, an element of the (2,3,7) triangle group acts on a triangular tiling of the hyperbolic plane by permuting the triangles. By a group action, the group pattern is connected to the structure of the object being acted on.
In chemistry, point groups describe molecular symmetries, while space groups describe crystal symmetries in crystallography. These symmetries underlie the chemical and physical behavior of these systems, and group theory enables simplification of quantum mechanical analysis of these properties.[2] For example, group theory is used to show that optical transitions between certain quantum levels cannot occur simply because of the symmetry of the states involved.
Group theory helps predict the changes in physical properties that occur when a material undergoes a phase transition, for example, from a cubic to a tetrahedral crystalline form. An example is ferroelectric materials, where the change from a paraelectric to a ferroelectric state occurs at the Curie temperature and is related to a change from the high-symmetry paraelectric state to the lower symmetry ferroelectric state, accompanied by a so-called soft phonon mode, a vibrational lattice mode that goes to zero frequency at the transition.
Such spontaneous symmetry breaking has found further application in elementary particle physics, where its occurrence is related to the appearance of Goldstone bosons.
width=20% | width=25% | width=15% | width=20% | ||||
Buckminsterfullerene displaysicosahedral symmetry | Ammonia, NH3. Its symmetry group is of order 6, generated by a 120° rotation and a reflection. | Cubane C8H8 features octahedral symmetry. | The tetrachloroplatinate(II) ion, [PtCl<sub>4</sub>]2− exhibits square-planar geometry |
Finite symmetry groups such as the Mathieu groups are used in coding theory, which is in turn applied in error correction of transmitted data, and in CD players. Another application is differential Galois theory, which characterizes functions having antiderivatives of a prescribed form, giving group-theoretic criteria for when solutions of certain differential equations are well-behaved. Geometric properties that remain stable under group actions are investigated in (geometric) invariant theory.
See main article: General linear group, Representation theory and Character theory. Matrix groups consist of matrices together with matrix multiplication. The general linear group
GL(n,\R)
n
Representation theory is both an application of the group concept and important for a deeper understanding of groups. It studies the group by its group actions on other spaces. A broad class of group representations are linear representations in which the group acts on a vector space, such as the three-dimensional Euclidean space . A representation of a group
G
n
\rho:G\toGL(n,\R)
A group action gives further means to study the object being acted on. On the other hand, it also yields information about the group. Group representations are an organizing principle in the theory of finite groups, Lie groups, algebraic groups and topological groups, especially (locally) compact groups.
ax2+bx+c=0
\pm
+
-
Modern Galois theory generalizes the above type of Galois groups by shifting to field theory and considering field extensions formed as the splitting field of a polynomial. This theory establishes—via the fundamental theorem of Galois theory—a precise relationship between fields and groups, underlining once again the ubiquity of groups in mathematics.
See main article: Finite group. A group is called finite if it has a finite number of elements. The number of elements is called the order of the group. An important class is the symmetric groups, the groups of permutations of
N
S3
SN
S3
The order of an element
a
G
n
an
n
an
n
a
More sophisticated counting techniques, for example, counting cosets, yield more precise statements about finite groups: Lagrange's Theorem states that for a finite group
G
H
The dihedral group
D4
r1
R
fv
x | |
F | |
p |
p
Any finite abelian group is isomorphic to a product of finite cyclic groups; this statement is part of the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups.
Any group of prime order
p
Zp
p2
Z | |
p2 |
p3
D4
23
When a group
G
N
\{1\}
G
G
N
See main article: Classification of finite simple groups.
Computer algebra systems have been used to list all groups of order up to 2000.But classifying all finite groups is a problem considered too hard to be solved.
The classification of all finite simple groups was a major achievement in contemporary group theory. There are several infinite families of such groups, as well as 26 "sporadic groups" that do not belong to any of the families. The largest sporadic group is called the monster group. The monstrous moonshine conjectures, proved by Richard Borcherds, relate the monster group to certain modular functions.
The gap between the classification of simple groups and the classification of all groups lies in the extension problem.[4]
An equivalent definition of group consists of replacing the "there exist" part of the group axioms by operations whose result is the element that must exist. So, a group is a set
G
G x G → G
G → G
This way of defining groups lends itself to generalizations such as the notion of group object in a category. Briefly, this is an object with morphisms that mimic the group axioms.
See main article: Topological group. Some topological spaces may be endowed with a group law. In order for the group law and the topology to interweave well, the group operations must be continuous functions; informally,
g ⋅ h
g-1
g
h
See main article: Lie group. A Lie group is a group that also has the structure of a differentiable manifold; informally, this means that it looks locally like a Euclidean space of some fixed dimension. Again, the definition requires the additional structure, here the manifold structure, to be compatible: the multiplication and inverse maps are required to be smooth.
A standard example is the general linear group introduced above: it is an open subset of the space of all
n
n
A
n
n
Lie groups are of fundamental importance in modern physics: Noether's theorem links continuous symmetries to conserved quantities. Rotation, as well as translations in space and time, are basic symmetries of the laws of mechanics. They can, for instance, be used to construct simple models—imposing, say, axial symmetry on a situation will typically lead to significant simplification in the equations one needs to solve to provide a physical description. Another example is the group of Lorentz transformations, which relate measurements of time and velocity of two observers in motion relative to each other. They can be deduced in a purely group-theoretical way, by expressing the transformations as a rotational symmetry of Minkowski space. The latter serves—in the absence of significant gravitation—as a model of spacetime in special relativity. The full symmetry group of Minkowski space, i.e., including translations, is known as the Poincaré group. By the above, it plays a pivotal role in special relativity and, by implication, for quantum field theories. Symmetries that vary with location are central to the modern description of physical interactions with the help of gauge theory. An important example of a gauge theory is the Standard Model, which describes three of the four known fundamental forces and classifies all known elementary particles.
More general structures may be defined by relaxing some of the axioms defining a group. The table gives a list of several structures generalizing groups.
For example, if the requirement that every element has an inverse is eliminated, the resulting algebraic structure is called a monoid. The natural numbers
N
(\Z\smallsetminus\{0\}, ⋅ )
A group can be thought of as a small category with one object in which every morphism is an isomorphism: given such a category, the set
\operatorname{Hom}(x,x)
Finally, it is possible to generalize any of these concepts by replacing the binary operation with an -ary operation (i.e., an operation taking arguments, for some nonnegative integer). With the proper generalization of the group axioms, this gives a notion of -ary group.
Set | Natural numbers | Integers | Rational numbers Real numbers Complex numbers | Integers modulo 3 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Operation | + | × | + | × | + | − | × | ÷ | + | × |
Closed | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Identity | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | N/A | 1 | N/A | 0 | 1 |
Inverse | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 0, 2, 1, respectively | N/A, 1, 2, respectively | |||
Associative | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Commutative | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Structure | monoid | |||||||||