Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updated: 24 September 2014
Lecture 22: Cosets and quotient groups
Let be a group. A subgroup of is a subset such that
(a)
If then
(b)
(c)
If then
Let be a subgroup of A coset of in
is a subset
with
Then
There are really only cosets here since
is the set of cosets of in In our example
Let be a group and let be a subgroup of Let
(a)
(b)
is a partition of
A partition of a set is a collection of subsets of such that
(a)
The union of the sets in is
(b)
If then
or
Let be a group and let be a subgroup of Then
Proof of the proposition.
(a)
To show:
To show: There exists a bijective function
Let
To show: is bijective.
To show: There exists a function such that
and
Let
so that
To show:
(aa)
(ab)
(aa)
To show: If then
Assume
To show:
(ab)
To show: If then
Assume
To show:
(b)
To show:
is a partition of
To show:
(ba)
(bb)
If then
or
(ba)
To show: If then there exists such that
Assume
To show: There exists such that
Let
To show:
since
(bb)
Assume and
To show:
Since
there exists
Let be such that
and
To show:
To show:
(bba)
(bbb)
(bba)
To show: If then
Assume
Then there exists such that
To show:
since is a subgroup.
(bbb)
To show: If then
Assume
Then there exists such that
To show:
since is a subgroup.
So
So is a partition of
Notes and References
These are a typed copy of Lecture 22 from a series of handwritten lecture notes for the class Group Theory and Linear Algebra given on September 13, 2011.