Profinite group explained
In mathematics, a profinite group is a topological group that is in a certain sense assembled from a system of finite groups.
The idea of using a profinite group is to provide a "uniform", or "synoptic", view of an entire system of finite groups. Properties of the profinite group are generally speaking uniform properties of the system. For example, the profinite group is finitely generated (as a topological group) if and only if there exists
such that every group in the system can be generated by
elements.
[1] Many theorems about finite groups can be readily generalised to profinite groups; examples are
Lagrange's theorem and the
Sylow theorems.
[2] To construct a profinite group one needs a system of finite groups and group homomorphisms between them. Without loss of generality, these homomorphisms can be assumed to be surjective, in which case the finite groups will appear as quotient groups of the resulting profinite group; in a sense, these quotients approximate the profinite group.
Important examples of profinite groups are the additive groups of
-adic integers and the Galois groups of infinite-degree field extensions.
Every profinite group is compact and totally disconnected. A non-compact generalization of the concept is that of locally profinite groups. Even more general are the totally disconnected groups.
Definition
Profinite groups can be defined in either of two equivalent ways.
First definition (constructive)
an
indexed family of finite groups
each having the
discrete topology, and a family of
homomorphisms
:Gj\toGi\midi,j\inI,i\leqj\}
such that
is the
identity map on
and the collection satisfies the composition property
whenever
The inverse limit is the set:
equipped with the
relative product topology.
One can also define the inverse limit in terms of a universal property. In categorical terms, this is a special case of a cofiltered limit construction.
Second definition (axiomatic)
A profinite group is a compact, and totally disconnected topological group:[4] that is, a topological group that is also a Stone space.
Profinite completion
Given an arbitrary group
there is a related profinite group
the of
It is defined as the inverse limit of the groups
where
runs through the
normal subgroups in
of finite
index (these normal subgroups are partially ordered by inclusion, which translates into an inverse system of natural homomorphisms between the quotients).
There is a natural homomorphism
and the image of
under this homomorphism is
dense in
The homomorphism
is injective if and only if the group
is
residually finite (i.e.,
where the intersection runs through all normal subgroups of finite index).
The homomorphism
is characterized by the following
universal property: given any profinite group
and any continuous group homomorphism
where
is given the smallest topology compatible with group operations in which its normal subgroups of finite index are open, there exists a unique continuous group homomorphism
with
Equivalence
Any group constructed by the first definition satisfies the axioms in the second definition.
Conversely, any group
satisfying the axioms in the second definition can be constructed as an inverse limit according to the first definition using the inverse limit
where
ranges through the open
normal subgroups of
ordered by (reverse) inclusion. If
is topologically finitely generated then it is in addition equal to its own profinite completion.
[5] Surjective systems
In practice, the inverse system of finite groups is almost always, meaning that all its maps are surjective. Without loss of generality, it suffices to consider only surjective systems since given any inverse system, it is possible to first construct its profinite group
and then it as its own profinite completion.
Examples
under addition is profinite (in fact procyclic). It is the inverse limit of the finite groups
where
ranges over all
natural numbers and the natural maps
for
The topology on this profinite group is the same as the topology arising from the
-adic valuation on
is the profinite completion of
In detail, it is the inverse limit of the finite groups
where
with the modulo maps
for
This group is the product of all the groups
and it is the
absolute Galois group of any
finite field.
is a
Galois extension, consider the group
G=\operatorname{Gal}(L/K)
consisting of all
field automorphisms of
that keep all elements of
fixed. This group is the inverse limit of the finite groups
where
ranges over all intermediate fields such that
is a Galois extension. For the limit process, the restriction homomorphisms
\operatorname{Gal}(F1/K)\to\operatorname{Gal}(F2/K)
are used, where
The topology obtained on
is known as the
Krull topology after
Wolfgang Krull. showed that profinite group is isomorphic to one arising from the Galois theory of field
but one cannot (yet) control which field
will be in this case. In fact, for many fields
one does not know in general precisely which
finite groups occur as Galois groups over
This is the
inverse Galois problem for a field
(For some fields
the inverse Galois problem is settled, such as the field of
rational functions in one variable over the complex numbers.) Not every profinite group occurs as an
absolute Galois group of a field.
[6]
Properties and facts
- Every product of (arbitrarily many) profinite groups is profinite; the topology arising from the profiniteness agrees with the product topology. The inverse limit of an inverse system of profinite groups with continuous transition maps is profinite and the inverse limit functor is exact on the category of profinite groups. Further, being profinite is an extension property.
- Every closed subgroup of a profinite group is itself profinite; the topology arising from the profiniteness agrees with the subspace topology. If
is a closed normal subgroup of a profinite group
then the
factor group
is profinite; the topology arising from the profiniteness agrees with the
quotient topology.
- Since every profinite group
is compact Hausdorff, there exists a
Haar measure on
which allows us to measure the "size" of subsets of
compute certain
probabilities, and
integrate functions on
- A subgroup of a profinite group is open if and only if it is closed and has finite index.
- According to a theorem of Nikolay Nikolov and Dan Segal, in any topologically finitely generated profinite group (that is, a profinite group that has a dense finitely generated subgroup) the subgroups of finite index are open. This generalizes an earlier analogous result of Jean-Pierre Serre for topologically finitely generated pro-
groups. The proof uses the classification of finite simple groups.
- As an easy corollary of the Nikolov–Segal result above, surjective discrete group homomorphism
between profinite groups
and
is continuous as long as
is topologically finitely generated. Indeed, any open subgroup of
is of finite index, so its preimage in
is also of finite index, and hence it must be open.
and
are topologically finitely generated profinite groups that are isomorphic as discrete groups by an isomorphism
Then
is bijective and continuous by the above result. Furthermore,
is also continuous, so
is a homeomorphism. Therefore the topology on a topologically finitely generated profinite group is uniquely determined by its structure.
Ind-finite groups
There is a notion of, which is the conceptual dual to profinite groups; i.e. a group
is ind-finite if it is the
direct limit of an inductive system of finite groups. (In particular, it is an ind-group.) The usual terminology is different: a group
is called
locally finite if every
finitely generated subgroup is finite. This is equivalent, in fact, to being 'ind-finite'.
By applying Pontryagin duality, one can see that abelian profinite groups are in duality with locally finite discrete abelian groups. The latter are just the abelian torsion groups.
Projective profinite groups
A profinite group is if it has the lifting property for every extension. This is equivalent to saying that
is projective if for every surjective morphism from a profinite
there is a
section
[7] [8] Projectivity for a profinite group
is equivalent to either of the two properties:
[7] \operatorname{cd}(G)\leq1;
the Sylow
-subgroups of
are free pro-
-groups.
Every projective profinite group can be realized as an absolute Galois group of a pseudo algebraically closed field. This result is due to Alexander Lubotzky and Lou van den Dries.[9]
Procyclic group
A profinite group
is if it is topologically generated by a single element
that is, if
G=\overline{\langle\sigma\rangle},
the closure of the subgroup
\langle\sigma\rangle=\left\{\sigman:n\in\Z\right\}.
[10] A topological group
is procyclic if and only if
G\cong{style\prod\limitsp\in
} G_p where
ranges over some set of
prime numbers
and
is isomorphic to either
or
[11] References
- Book: Fried . Michael D. . Jarden . Moshe . Field arithmetic . 3rd revised . Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge . 11 . . 2008 . 978-3-540-77269-9 . 1145.12001 .
- .
- .
- .
- . Review of several books about profinite groups.
- .
- .
Notes and References
- Segal . Dan . 2007-03-29 . Some aspects of profinite group theory . math/0703885 .
- Book: Wilson, John Stuart . Profinite groups . 1998 . Clarendon Press . 9780198500827 . Oxford . 40658188.
- Web site: Profinite Groups. Lenstra. Hendrik. Leiden University.
- Web site: Inverse limits and profinite groups. Osserman. Brian. University of California, Davis. https://web.archive.org/web/20181226233013/https://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~osserman/classes/250C/notes/profinite.pdf. 2018-12-26.
- Nikolov. Nikolay . Segal. Dan . On finitely generated profinite groups. I: Strong completeness and uniform bounds. II: Products in quasisimple groups . 1126.20018 . Ann. Math. (2) . 165 . 1 . 171–238, 239–273 . 2007 . 10.4007/annals.2007.165.171 . 15670650 . math/0604399 .
- Fried & Jarden (2008) p. 497
- Serre (1997) p. 58
- Fried & Jarden (2008) p. 207
- Fried & Jarden (2008) pp. 208,545
- Book: Neukirch, Jürgen. Algebraic Number Theory. 1999. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. 978-3-642-08473-7. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften. 322. Berlin, Heidelberg. 10.1007/978-3-662-03983-0.
- Web site: MO. decomposition of procyclic groups. MathOverflow.