Nilpotent and solvable groups
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 27 November 2011
Nilpotent and Solvable groups
A group is a set with a multiplication such that
-
If then
.
- There exists an identity ,
- Every element of is invertible.
Let be a group.
Let .
- The commutator of with is
.
-
The lower central series of is the sequence
- The derived series of is the sequence
Let be a group.
- The group is abelian
if .
- The group is nilpotent if
there exists
such that .
- The group is solvable if
there exists
such that .
-
The radical of a
Lie??? group is the largest connected solvable normal subgroup of .
WHY IS THE LIE IN THIS DEFNITION??
Nondiscrete groups
- A topological group is a topological space
which is also a group such that multiplication and inversion
are morphisms of topological spaces, i.e. continuous maps.
-
A Lie group is a smooth manifold with a group structure such that multiplication and inversion are morphisms of smooth manifolds, i.e. smooth maps.
- A complex Lie group is a complex analytic manifold with a group structure such that multiplication and inversion are morphisms of complex analytic manifolds, i.e. holomorphic maps.
- A linear algebraic group is an affine algebraic variety which is also a group such that multiplication and inversion are morphisms of affine algebraic varieties.
- A group scheme is a scheme which is also a group such that multiplication and inversion are morphisms of schemes.
Notes and References
These basic definitions need to be combined with another page somewhere. The reference below needs fixing.
References
[BouTop]
N. Bourbaki,
General Topology, Chapter VI, Springer-Verlag, Berlin 1989.
MR?????
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