Let G,G be groups, ϕ:G→G be a mapping, ∀x,y∈G,ϕ(xy)=ϕ(x)ϕ(y)⟹ϕ is a homomorphism.
- the kernel of a homomorphism ϕ:G→H is :Ker(ϕ)={g∈G:ϕ(g)=eH}
- the kernel of a isomorphism ϕ:G→H is a subgroup of G
- the kernel is a normal subgroup of G
- the image of a homomorphism ϕ:G→H is :Im(ϕ)={h∈H:∃h∈G,ϕ(g)=h}
- the image of a homomorphism ϕ:G→H is a subgroup of H
Homomorphisms Property
let ϕ:G→G be a homomorphism and g∈G :
- ϕ carries the identity of G to the identity of G (i.e ϕ(eG)=eH)
- ∀n∈Z,ϕ(g)n=ϕ(gn)
- ∣g∣<∞⟹∣ϕ(g)∣∣∣g∣
- Ker(ϕ) is a subgroup of G
- ϕ(a)=ϕ(b)⟺aKer(ϕ)=bKer(ϕ)
- ϕ(g)=g′⟹ϕ−1(g′)={x∈G:ϕ(x)=g′}=gKer(ϕ)
Properties of Subgroups Under Homomorphisms
Let ϕ:G→G is a homomorphism, H≤G, K≤G then:
- ϕ(H)={ϕ(h)∣h∈H} is a subgroup of G
- H is cyclic ⟹ ϕ(H) is cyclic
- H is Abelian ⟹ ϕ(H) is Abelian
- H is Normal ⟹ ϕ(H) is Normal in ϕ(G)
- ∣Ker(ϕ)∣=n⟹ϕ is an n-to-1 mapping from G onto G
- ∣H∣=n⟹∣ϕ(H)∣∣n
- ϕ−1(K)={k∈G:ϕ(k)∈K} is a subgroup of G
- if K is normal, then ϕ−1(K) is normal in G
Theorem: Normal Subgroups Are Kernels
Every normal subgroup N of a group G is the kernel of a homomorphism of G (i.e. ϕ:G→G/N⟹N=Ker(ϕ))
Isomorphism Theorems
(First Isomorphism Theorem): let ϕ:G→G be a homomorphism. Then G/Ker(ϕ)→ϕ(G) is an isomorphism, i.e. ϕ(G)/Ker(ϕ)≈ϕ(G)
- ∣ϕ(G)∣∣∣G∣ and ∣ϕ(G)∣∣G
- (N/C theorem): N is the normalizer of group H≤G, and C is the centralizer of H in G, then N/C≈Aut(H)
(Second Isomorphism Theorem): Let A,B be subgroups of G, and assume that A is a subgroup of N(B):
- AB is a subgroup of G
- B is normal in AB, A∩B is normal in A
- AB/B≅A/A∩B
(Third Isomorphism Theorem): Let G be a group, and consider two normal subgroups H,K of G such that H is a subgroup of K:
- K/H is a normal subgroup of G/H
- (G/H)/(K/H)≅G/K