Jump to content

Zassenhaus group

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BG19bot (talk | contribs) at 00:57, 17 March 2016 (Remove blank line(s) between list items per WP:LISTGAP to fix an accessibility issue for users of screen readers. Do WP:GENFIXES and cleanup if needed. Discuss this at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Accessibility#LISTGAP). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In mathematics, a Zassenhaus group, named after Hans Zassenhaus, is a certain sort of doubly transitive permutation group very closely related to rank-1 groups of Lie type.

Definition

A Zassenhaus group is a permutation group G on a finite set X with the following three properties:

  • G is doubly transitive.
  • Non-trivial elements of G fix at most two points.
  • G has no regular normal subgroup. ("Regular" means that non-trivial elements do not fix any points of X; compare free action.)

The degree of a Zassenhaus group is the number of elements of X.

Some authors omit the third condition that G has no regular normal subgroup. This condition is put in to eliminate some "degenerate" cases. The extra examples one gets by omitting it are either Frobenius groups or certain groups of degree 2p and order 2p(2p − 1)p for a prime p, that are generated by all semilinear mappings and Galois automorphisms of a field of order 2p.

Examples

We let q = pf be a power of a prime p, and write Fq for the finite field of order q. Suzuki proved that any Zassenhaus group is of one of the following four types:

  • The projective special linear group PSL2(Fq) for q > 3 odd, acting on the q + 1 points of the projective line. It has order (q + 1)q(q − 1)/2.
  • The projective general linear group PGL2(Fq) for q > 3. It has order (q + 1)q(q − 1).
  • A certain group containing PSL2(Fq) with index 2, for q an odd square. It has order (q + 1)q(q − 1).
  • The Suzuki group Suz(Fq) for q a power of 2 that is at least 8 and not a square. The order is (q2 + 1)q2(q − 1)

The degree of these groups is q + 1 in the first three cases, q2 + 1 in the last case.

Further reading

  • Finite Groups III (Grundlehren Der Mathematischen Wissenschaften Series, Vol 243) by B. Huppert, N. Blackburn, ISBN 0-387-10633-2