Group Theory and Sage#
Author: Robert A. Beezer, University of Puget Sound
This compilation collects Sage commands that are useful for a student in an introductory course on group theory. It is not intended to teach Sage or to teach group theory. (There are many introductory texts on group theory and more information on Sage can be found via www.sagemath.org) Rather, by presenting commands roughly in the order a student would learn the corresponding mathematics they might be encouraged to experiment and learn more about mathematics and learn more about Sage. Not coincidentally, when Sage was the acronym SAGE, the “E” in Sage stood for “Experimentation.”
This guide is also distributed in PDF format and as a Sage worksheet. The worksheet version can be imported into the Sage notebook environment running in a web browser, and then the displayed chunks of code may be executed by Sage if one clicks on the small “evaluate” link below each cell, for a fully interactive experience. A PDF and Sage worksheet versions of this tutorial are available at http://abstract.ups.edu/sage-aata.html.
Changelog:
2009/01/30 Version 1.0, first complete release
2009/03/03 Version 1.1, added cyclic group size interact
2010/03/10 Version 1.3, dropped US on license, some edits.
Basic properties of the integers#
Integer division#
The command a % b
will return the remainder upon division of \(a\)
by \(b\). In other words, the value is the unique integer \(r\) such that:
\(0 \leq r < b\); and
\(a = bq + r\) for some integer \(q\) (the quotient).
Then \((a - r) / b\) will equal \(q\). For example:
sage: r = 14 % 3
sage: q = (14 - r) / 3
sage: r, q
(2, 4)
will return 2
for the value of r
and 4
for the value of
q
. Note that the “/
” is integer division, where any
remainder is cast away and the result is always an integer. So, for
example, 14 / 3
will again equal 4
, not 4.66666
.
Greatest common divisor#
The greatest common divisor of \(a\) and \(b\) is obtained with the
command gcd(a,b)
, where in our first uses, \(a\) and \(b\) are
integers. Later, \(a\) and \(b\) can be other objects with a notion
of divisibility and “greatness,” such as polynomials. For example:
sage: gcd(2776, 2452)
4
Extended greatest common divisor#
The command xgcd(a, b)
(“eXtended GCD”) returns a triple where the
first element is the greatest common divisor of \(a\) and \(b\) (as with
the gcd(a, b)
command above), but the next two elements are the
values of \(r\) and \(s\) such that \(ra + sb = \gcd(a, b)\). For example,
xgcd(633, 331)
returns (1, 194, -371)
. Portions of the triple
can be extracted using [ ]
to access the entries of the triple,
starting with the first as number 0
. For example, the following
should return the result True
(even if you change the values of
a
and b
). Studying this block of code will go a long way
towards helping you get the most out of Sage’s output. (Note that
“=
” is how a value is assigned to a variable, while as in the last
line, “==
” is how we determine equality of two items.)
sage: a = 633
sage: b = 331
sage: extended = xgcd(a, b)
sage: g = extended[0]
sage: r = extended[1]
sage: s = extended[2]
sage: g == r*a + s*b
True
Divisibility#
A remainder of zero indicates divisibility. So (a % b) == 0
will
return True
if \(b\) divides \(a\), and will otherwise return
False
. For example, (9 % 3) == 0
is True
, but
(9 % 4) == 0
is False
. Try predicting the output of the
following before executing it in Sage.
sage: answer1 = ((20 % 5) == 0)
sage: answer2 = ((17 % 4) == 0)
sage: answer1, answer2
(True, False)
Factoring#
As promised by the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic, factor(a)
will return a unique expression for \(a\) as a product of powers of
primes. It will print in a nicely-readable form, but can also be
manipulated with Python as a list of pairs \((p_i, e_i)\) containing
primes as bases, and their associated exponents. For example:
sage: factor(2600)
2^3 * 5^2 * 13
If you just want the prime divisors of an integer, then use the
prime_divisors(a)
command, which will return a list of all the
prime divisors of \(a\). For example:
sage: prime_divisors(2600)
[2, 5, 13]
We can strip off other pieces of the prime decomposition using two
levels of [ ]
. This is another good example to study in order to
learn about how to drill down into Python lists.
sage: n = 2600
sage: decomposition = factor(n)
sage: print("{} decomposes as {}".format(n, decomposition))
2600 decomposes as 2^3 * 5^2 * 13
sage: secondterm = decomposition[1]
sage: print("Base and exponent (pair) for second prime: "+str(secondterm))
Base and exponent (pair) for second prime: (5, 2)
sage: base = secondterm[0]
sage: exponent = secondterm[1]
sage: print("Base is "+str(base))
Base is 5
sage: print("Exponent is "+str(exponent))
Exponent is 2
sage: thirdbase = decomposition[2][0]
sage: thirdexponent = decomposition[2][1]
sage: print("Base of third term is {} with exponent {}".format(thirdbase, thirdexponent))
Base of third term is 13 with exponent 1
With a bit more work, the factor()
command can be used to factor
more complicated items, such as polynomials.
Multiplicative inverse, modular arithmetic#
The command inverse_mod(a, n)
yields the multiplicative inverse of
\(a\) mod \(n\) (or an error if it doesn’t exist). For example:
sage: inverse_mod(352, 917)
508
(As a check, find the integer \(m\) such that 352*508 == m*917+1
.)
Then try
sage: inverse_mod(4, 24)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ZeroDivisionError: inverse of Mod(4, 24) does not exist
and explain the result.
Powers with modular arithmetic#
The command power_mod(a, m, n)
yields \(a^m\) mod \(n\). For example:
sage: power_mod(15, 831, 23)
10
If \(m = -1\), then this command will duplicate the function of
inverse_mod()
.
Euler \(\phi\)-function#
The command euler_phi(n)
will return the number of positive
integers less than \(n\) and relatively prime to \(n\) (i.e. having
greatest common divisor with \(n\) equal to 1). For example:
sage: euler_phi(345)
176
Experiment by running the following code several times:
sage: m = random_prime(10000)
sage: n = random_prime(10000)
sage: euler_phi(m*n) == euler_phi(m) * euler_phi(n)
True
Feel a conjecture coming on? Can you generalize this result?
Primes#
The command is_prime(a)
returns True
or False
depending on
if \(a\) is prime or not. For example,
sage: is_prime(117371)
True
while
sage: is_prime(14547073)
False
since \(14547073 = 1597 * 9109\) (as you could determine with the
factor()
command).
The command random_prime(a, True)
will return a random prime
between 2 and \(a\). Experiment with:
sage: p = random_prime(10^21, True)
sage: is_prime(p)
True
(Replacing True
by False
will speed up the search, but there
will be a very small probability the result will not be prime.)
The command prime_range(a, b)
returns an ordered list of all the
primes from \(a\) to \(b - 1\), inclusive. For example,
sage: prime_range(500, 550)
[503, 509, 521, 523, 541, 547]
The commands next_prime(a)
and previous_prime(a)
are other
ways to get a single prime number of a desired size. Give them a try.
Permutation groups#
A good portion of Sage’s support for group theory is based on routines from GAP (Groups, Algorithms, and Programming at https://www.gap-system.org. Groups can be described in many different ways, such as sets of matrices or sets of symbols subject to a few defining relations. A very concrete way to represent groups is via permutations (one-to-one and onto functions of the integers 1 through \(n\)), using function composition as the operation in the group. Sage has many routines designed to work with groups of this type and they are also a good way for those learning group theory to gain experience with the basic ideas of group theory. For both these reasons, we will concentrate on these types of groups.
Writing permutations#
Sage uses “disjoint cycle notation” for permutations, see any introductory text on group theory (such as Judson, Section 4.1) for more on this. Composition occurs left to right, which is not what you might expect and is exactly the reverse of what Judson and many others use. (There are good reasons to support either direction, you just need to be certain you know which one is in play.) There are two ways to write the permutation \(\sigma = (1\,3) (2\,5\,4)\):
As a text string (include quotes):
"(1,3) (2,5,4)"
As a Python list of “tuples”:
[(1,3), (2,5,4)]
Groups#
Sage knows many popular groups as sets of permutations. More are
listed below, but for starters, the full “symmetric group” of all
possible permutations of 1 through \(n\) can be built with the command
SymmetricGroup(n)
.
Permutation elements Elements of a group can be created, and composed, as follows
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(5)
sage: sigma = G("(1,3) (2,5,4)")
sage: rho = G([(2,4), (1,5)])
sage: rho^(-1) * sigma * rho
(1,2,4)(3,5)
Available functions for elements of a permutation group include finding the order of an element, i.e. for a permutation \(\sigma\) the order is the smallest power of \(k\) such that \(\sigma^k\) equals the identity element \(()\). For example:
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(5)
sage: sigma = G("(1,3) (2,5,4)")
sage: sigma.order()
6
The sign of the permutation \(\sigma\) is defined to be 1 for an even permutation and \(-1\) for an odd permutation. For example:
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(5)
sage: sigma = G("(1,3) (2,5,4)")
sage: sigma.sign()
-1
since \(\sigma\) is an odd permutation.
Many more available functions that can be applied to a permutation can
be found via “tab-completion.” With sigma
defined as an element
of a permutation group, in a Sage cell, type sigma.
(Note the
“.
”) and then press the Tab key. You will get a list of available
functions (you may need to scroll down to see the whole list).
Experiment and explore! It is what Sage is all about. You really
cannot break anything.
Creating groups#
This is an annotated list of some small well-known permutation groups that can be created simply in Sage. You can find more in the source code file
SAGE_ROOT/src/sage/groups/perm_gps/permgroup_named.py
SymmetricGroup(n)
: All \(n!\) permutations on \(n\) symbols.DihedralGroup(n)
: Symmetries of an \(n\)-gon. Rotations and flips, \(2n\) in total.CyclicPermutationGroup(n)
: Rotations of an \(n\)-gon (no flips), \(n\) in total.AlternatingGroup(n)
: Alternating group on \(n\) symbols having \(n!/2\) elements.KleinFourGroup()
: The non-cyclic group of order 4.
Group functions#
Individual elements of permutation groups are important, but we primarily wish to study groups as objects on their own. So a wide variety of computations are available for groups. Define a group, for example
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H
Dihedral group of order 12 as a permutation group
and then a variety of functions become available.
After trying the examples below, experiment with tab-completion.
Having defined H
, type H.
(note the “.
”) and then press
the Tab key. You will get a list of available functions (you may need
to scroll down to see the whole list). As before,
experiment and explore—it is really hard to break anything.
Here is another couple of ways to experiment and explore. Find a
function that looks interesting, say is_abelian()
. Type
H.is_abelian?
(note the question mark) followed by the Enter key.
This will display a portion of the source code for the
is_abelian()
function, describing the inputs and output, possibly
illustrated with example uses.
If you want to learn more about how Sage works, or possibly extend its
functionality, then you can start by examining the complete Python
source code. For example, try H.is_abelian??
, which will allow
you to determine that the is_abelian()
function is basically
riding on GAP’s IsAbelian()
command and asking GAP do the
heavy-lifting for us. (To get the maximum advantage of using Sage it
helps to know some basic Python programming, but it is not required.)
OK, on to some popular command for groups. If you are using the worksheet, be sure you have defined the group \(H\) as the dihedral group \(D_6\), since we will not keep repeating its definition below.
Abelian?#
The command
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H.is_abelian()
False
will return False
since \(D_6\) is a non-abelian group.
Order#
The command
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H.order()
12
will return 12
since \(D_6\) is a group of with 12 elements.
All elements#
The command
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H.list()
[(),
(1,5,3)(2,6,4),
(1,3,5)(2,4,6),
(1,6,5,4,3,2),
(1,4)(2,5)(3,6),
(1,2,3,4,5,6),
(2,6)(3,5),
(1,5)(2,4),
(1,3)(4,6),
(1,6)(2,5)(3,4),
(1,4)(2,3)(5,6),
(1,2)(3,6)(4,5)]
will return all of the elements of \(H\) in a fixed order as a Python
list. Indexing ([ ]
) can be used to extract the individual
elements of the list, remembering that counting the elements of the
list begins at zero.
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: elements = H.list()
sage: elements[2]
(1,3,5)(2,4,6)
Cayley table#
The command
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H.cayley_table()
* a b c d e f g h i j k l
+------------------------
a| a b c d e f g h i j k l
b| b a d c f e h g j i l k
c| c k a e d g f i h l b j
d| d l b f c h e j g k a i
e| e j k g a i d l f b c h
f| f i l h b j c k e a d g
g| g h j i k l a b d c e f
h| h g i j l k b a c d f e
i| i f h l j b k c a e g d
j| j e g k i a l d b f h c
k| k c e a g d i f l h j b
l| l d f b h c j e k g i a
will construct the Cayley table (or “multiplication table”) of \(H\).
By default the table uses lowercase Latin letters to name the elements
of the group. The actual elements used can be found using the
row_keys()
or column_keys()
commands for the table.
For example to determine the fifth element in the table, the
element named e
:
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: T = H.cayley_table()
sage: headings = T.row_keys()
sage: headings[4]
(1,3)(4,6)
Center#
The command H.center()
will return a subgroup that is the center
of the group \(H\) (see Exercise 2.46 in Judson). Try
sage: H = DihedralGroup(6)
sage: H.center().list()
[(), (1,4)(2,5)(3,6)]
to see which elements of \(H\) commute with every element of \(H\).
Cayley graph#
For fun, try show(H.cayley_graph())
.
Subgroups#
Cyclic subgroups#
If G
is a group and a
is an element of the group (try
a = G.random_element()
), then
a = G.random_element()
H = G.subgroup([a])
will create H
as the cyclic subgroup of G
with generator
a
.
For example the code below will:
create
G
as the symmetric group on five symbols;specify
sigma
as an element ofG
;use
sigma
as the generator of a cyclic subgroupH
;list all the elements of
H
.
In more mathematical notation, we might write \(\langle (1\,2\,3) (4\,5) \rangle = H \subseteq G = S_5\).
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(5)
sage: sigma = G("(1,2,3) (4,5)")
sage: H = G.subgroup([sigma])
sage: H.list()
[(), (1,2,3)(4,5), (1,3,2), (4,5), (1,2,3), (1,3,2)(4,5)]
Experiment by trying different permutations for sigma
and
observing the effect on H
.
Cyclic groups#
Groups that are cyclic themselves are both important and rich in
structure. The command CyclicPermutationGroup(n)
will create a
permutation group that is cyclic with n
elements. Consider the
following example (note that the indentation of the third line is
critical) which will list the elements of a cyclic group of order 20,
preceded by the order of each element.
sage: n = 20
sage: CN = CyclicPermutationGroup(n)
sage: for g in CN:
....: print("{} {}".format(g.order(), g))
1 ()
20 (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20)
10 (1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19)(2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20)
20 (1,4,7,10,13,16,19,2,5,8,11,14,17,20,3,6,9,12,15,18)
5 (1,5,9,13,17)(2,6,10,14,18)(3,7,11,15,19)(4,8,12,16,20)
4 (1,6,11,16)(2,7,12,17)(3,8,13,18)(4,9,14,19)(5,10,15,20)
10 (1,7,13,19,5,11,17,3,9,15)(2,8,14,20,6,12,18,4,10,16)
20 (1,8,15,2,9,16,3,10,17,4,11,18,5,12,19,6,13,20,7,14)
5 (1,9,17,5,13)(2,10,18,6,14)(3,11,19,7,15)(4,12,20,8,16)
20 (1,10,19,8,17,6,15,4,13,2,11,20,9,18,7,16,5,14,3,12)
2 (1,11)(2,12)(3,13)(4,14)(5,15)(6,16)(7,17)(8,18)(9,19)(10,20)
20 (1,12,3,14,5,16,7,18,9,20,11,2,13,4,15,6,17,8,19,10)
5 (1,13,5,17,9)(2,14,6,18,10)(3,15,7,19,11)(4,16,8,20,12)
20 (1,14,7,20,13,6,19,12,5,18,11,4,17,10,3,16,9,2,15,8)
10 (1,15,9,3,17,11,5,19,13,7)(2,16,10,4,18,12,6,20,14,8)
4 (1,16,11,6)(2,17,12,7)(3,18,13,8)(4,19,14,9)(5,20,15,10)
5 (1,17,13,9,5)(2,18,14,10,6)(3,19,15,11,7)(4,20,16,12,8)
20 (1,18,15,12,9,6,3,20,17,14,11,8,5,2,19,16,13,10,7,4)
10 (1,19,17,15,13,11,9,7,5,3)(2,20,18,16,14,12,10,8,6,4)
20 (1,20,19,18,17,16,15,14,13,12,11,10,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2)
By varying the size of the group (change the value of n
) you can
begin to illustrate some of the structure of a cyclic group (for
example, try a prime).
We can cut/paste an element of order 5 from the output above (in the case when the cyclic group has 20 elements) and quickly build a subgroup:
sage: C20 = CyclicPermutationGroup(20)
sage: rho = C20("(1,17,13,9,5)(2,18,14,10,6)(3,19,15,11,7)(4,20,16,12,8)")
sage: H = C20.subgroup([rho])
sage: H.list()
[(),
(1,17,13,9,5)(2,18,14,10,6)(3,19,15,11,7)(4,20,16,12,8),
(1,13,5,17,9)(2,14,6,18,10)(3,15,7,19,11)(4,16,8,20,12),
(1,9,17,5,13)(2,10,18,6,14)(3,11,19,7,15)(4,12,20,8,16),
(1,5,9,13,17)(2,6,10,14,18)(3,7,11,15,19)(4,8,12,16,20)]
For a cyclic group, the following command will list all of the subgroups.
sage: C20 = CyclicPermutationGroup(20)
sage: C20.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
[Subgroup generated by [()] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,11)(2,12)(3,13)(4,14)(5,15)(6,16)(7,17)(8,18)(9,19)(10,20)] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,6,11,16)(2,7,12,17)(3,8,13,18)(4,9,14,19)(5,10,15,20), (1,11)(2,12)(3,13)(4,14)(5,15)(6,16)(7,17)(8,18)(9,19)(10,20)] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,5,9,13,17)(2,6,10,14,18)(3,7,11,15,19)(4,8,12,16,20)] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19)(2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20), (1,5,9,13,17)(2,6,10,14,18)(3,7,11,15,19)(4,8,12,16,20)] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20), (1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19)(2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20), (1,5,9,13,17)(2,6,10,14,18)(3,7,11,15,19)(4,8,12,16,20)] of (Cyclic group of order 20 as a permutation group)]
Be careful, this command uses some more advanced ideas and will not usually list all of the subgroups of a group. Here we are relying on special properties of cyclic groups (but see the next section).
If you are viewing this as a PDF, you can safely skip over the next bit of code. However, if you are viewing this as a worksheet in Sage, then this is a place where you can experiment with the structure of the subgroups of a cyclic group. In the input box, enter the order of a cyclic group (numbers between 1 and 40 are good initial choices) and Sage will list each subgroup as a cyclic group with its generator. The factorization at the bottom might help you formulate a conjecture.
%auto
@interact
def _(n = input_box(default=12, label = "Cyclic group of order:", type=Integer) ):
cyclic = CyclicPermutationGroup(n)
subgroups = cyclic.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
html( "All subgroups of a cyclic group of order $%s$\n" % latex(n) )
table = "$\\begin{array}{ll}"
for sg in subgroups:
table = table + latex(sg.order()) + \
" & \\left\\langle" + latex(sg.gens()[0]) + \
"\\right\\rangle\\\\"
table = table + "\\end{array}$"
html(table)
html("\nHint: $%s$ factors as $%s$" % ( latex(n), latex(factor(n)) ) )
All subgroups#
If \(H\) is a subgroup of \(G\) and \(g \in G\), then
\(gHg^{-1} = \{ghg^{-1} \mid h \in G\}\) will also be a subgroup of \(G\).
If G
is a group, then the command
G.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
will return a list of subgroups of
G
, but not all of the subgroups. However, every subgroup can be
constructed from one on the list by the \(gHg^{-1}\) construction with a
suitable \(g\). As an illustration, the code below:
creates
K
as the dihedral group of order 24, \(D_{12}\);stores the list of subgroups output by
K.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
in the variablesg
;prints the elements of the list;
selects the second subgroup in the list, and lists its elements.
sage: K = DihedralGroup(12)
sage: sg = K.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
sage: sg
[Subgroup generated by [()] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2)(3,12)(4,11)(5,10)(6,9)(7,8)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8), (1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12), (1,10,7,4)(2,11,8,5)(3,12,9,6)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2)(3,12)(4,11)(5,10)(6,9)(7,8), (1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,3,5,7,9,11)(2,4,6,8,10,12), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2)(3,12)(4,11)(5,10)(6,9)(7,8), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8), (1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12), (1,10,7,4)(2,11,8,5)(3,12,9,6)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8), (1,3,5,7,9,11)(2,4,6,8,10,12), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12), (1,3,5,7,9,11)(2,4,6,8,10,12), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(1,2)(3,12)(4,11)(5,10)(6,9)(7,8), (1,3,5,7,9,11)(2,4,6,8,10,12), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group),
Subgroup generated by [(2,12)(3,11)(4,10)(5,9)(6,8), (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12), (1,3,5,7,9,11)(2,4,6,8,10,12), (1,5,9)(2,6,10)(3,7,11)(4,8,12)] of (Dihedral group of order 24 as a permutation group)]
sage: print("An order two subgroup:\n{}".format(sg[1].list()))
An order two subgroup:
[(), (1,7)(2,8)(3,9)(4,10)(5,11)(6,12)]
It is important to note that this is a nice long list of subgroups, but will rarely create every such subgroup. For example, the code below:
creates
rho
as an element of the groupK
;creates
L
as a cyclic subgroup ofK
;prints the two elements of
L
; and finallytests to see if this subgroup is part of the output of the list
sg
created just above (it is not).
sage: K = DihedralGroup(12)
sage: sg = K.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
sage: rho = K("(1,4) (2,3) (5,12) (6,11) (7,10) (8,9)")
sage: L = PermutationGroup([rho])
sage: L.list()
[(), (1,4)(2,3)(5,12)(6,11)(7,10)(8,9)]
sage: L in sg
False
Symmetry groups#
You can give Sage a short list of elements of a permutation group and Sage will find the smallest subgroup that contains those elements. We say the list “generates” the subgroup. We list a few interesting subgroups you can create this way.
Symmetries of an equilateral triangle#
Label the vertices of an equilateral triangle as 1, 2 and 3. Then
any permutation of the vertices will be a symmetry of the triangle.
So either SymmetricGroup(3)
or DihedralGroup(3)
will create
the full symmetry group.
Symmetries of an \(n\)-gon#
A regular, \(n\)-sided figure in the plane (an \(n\)-gon) has \(2n\)
symmetries, comprised of \(n\) rotations (including the trivial one) and
\(n\) “flips” about various axes. The dihedral group
DihedralGroup(n)
is frequently defined as exactly the symmetry
group of an \(n\)-gon.
Symmetries of a tetrahedron#
Label the 4 vertices of a regular tetrahedron as 1, 2, 3 and 4. Fix the vertex labeled 4 and rotate the opposite face through 120 degrees. This will create the permutation/symmetry \((1\,2\, 3)\). Similarly, fixing vertex 1, and rotating the opposite face will create the permutation \((2\,3\,4)\). These two permutations are enough to generate the full group of the twelve symmetries of the tetrahedron. Another symmetry can be visualized by running an axis through the midpoint of an edge of the tetrahedron through to the midpoint of the opposite edge, and then rotating by 180 degrees about this axis. For example, the 1–2 edge is opposite the 3–4 edge, and the symmetry is described by the permutation \((1\,2) (3\,4)\). This permutation, along with either of the above permutations will also generate the group. So here are two ways to create this group:
sage: tetra_one = PermutationGroup(["(1,2,3)", "(2,3,4)"])
sage: tetra_one
Permutation Group with generators [(2,3,4), (1,2,3)]
sage: tetra_two = PermutationGroup(["(1,2,3)", "(1,2)(3,4)"])
sage: tetra_two
Permutation Group with generators [(1,2)(3,4), (1,2,3)]
This group has a variety of interesting properties, so it is worth
experimenting with. You may also know it as the “alternating group
on 4 symbols,” which Sage will create with the command
AlternatingGroup(4)
.
Symmetries of a cube#
Label vertices of one face of a cube with 1, 2, 3 and 4, and on the opposite face label the vertices 5, 6, 7 and 8 (5 opposite 1, 6 opposite 2, etc.). Consider three axes that run from the center of a face to the center of the opposite face, and consider a quarter-turn rotation about each axis. These three rotations will construct the entire symmetry group. Use
sage: cube = PermutationGroup(["(3,2,6,7)(4,1,5,8)",
....: "(1,2,6,5)(4,3,7,8)", "(1,2,3,4)(5,6,7,8)"])
sage: cube.list()
[(),
(1,3)(2,4)(5,7)(6,8),
(1,6)(2,5)(3,8)(4,7),
(1,8)(2,7)(3,6)(4,5),
(1,4,3,2)(5,8,7,6),
(1,2,3,4)(5,6,7,8),
(1,5)(2,8)(3,7)(4,6),
(1,7)(2,6)(3,5)(4,8),
(2,5,4)(3,6,8),
(1,3,8)(2,7,5),
(1,6,3)(4,5,7),
(1,8,6)(2,4,7),
(1,4)(2,8)(3,5)(6,7),
(1,2,6,5)(3,7,8,4),
(1,5,6,2)(3,4,8,7),
(1,7)(2,3)(4,6)(5,8),
(2,4,5)(3,8,6),
(1,3,6)(4,7,5),
(1,6,8)(2,7,4),
(1,8,3)(2,5,7),
(1,4,8,5)(2,3,7,6),
(1,2)(3,5)(4,6)(7,8),
(1,5,8,4)(2,6,7,3),
(1,7)(2,8)(3,4)(5,6)]
A cube has four distinct diagonals (joining opposite vertices through the center of the cube). Each symmetry of the cube will cause the diagonals to arrange differently. In this way, we can view an element of the symmetry group as a permutation of four “symbols”—the diagonals. It happens that each of the 24 permutations of the diagonals is created by exactly one symmetry of the 8 vertices of the cube. So this subgroup of \(S_8\) is “the same as” \(S_4\). In Sage:
sage: cube = PermutationGroup(["(3,2,6,7)(4,1,5,8)",
....: "(1,2,6,5)(4,3,7,8)", "(1,2,3,4)(5,6,7,8)"])
sage: cube.is_isomorphic(SymmetricGroup(4))
True
will test to see if the group of symmetries of the cube are “the same
as” \(S_4\) and so will return True
.
Here is an another way to create the symmetries of a cube. Number the six faces of the cube as follows: 1 on top, 2 on the bottom, 3 in front, 4 on the right, 5 in back, 6 on the left. Now the same rotations as before (quarter-turns about axes through the centers of two opposite faces) can be used as generators of the symmetry group:
sage: cubeface = PermutationGroup(["(1,3,2,5)", "(1,4,2,6)", "(3,4,5,6)"])
sage: cubeface.list()
[(),
(3,5)(4,6),
(1,6,5)(2,4,3),
(1,6,3)(2,4,5),
(1,5,6)(2,3,4),
(1,5,4)(2,3,6),
(1,2)(4,6),
(1,2)(3,5),
(1,4,5)(2,6,3),
(1,4,3)(2,6,5),
(1,3,4)(2,5,6),
(1,3,6)(2,5,4),
(1,4,2,6),
(1,6)(2,4)(3,5),
(1,3,2,5),
(1,5,2,3),
(1,2)(3,4)(5,6),
(3,6,5,4),
(1,6,2,4),
(1,4)(2,6)(3,5),
(1,5)(2,3)(4,6),
(1,3)(2,5)(4,6),
(3,4,5,6),
(1,2)(3,6)(4,5)]
Again, this subgroup of \(S_6\) is “same as” the full symmetric group, \(S_4\):
sage: cubeface = PermutationGroup(["(1,3,2,5)", "(1,4,2,6)", "(3,4,5,6)"])
sage: cubeface.is_isomorphic(SymmetricGroup(4))
True
It turns out that in each of the above constructions, it is sufficient to use just two of the three generators (any two). But one generator is not enough. Give it a try and use Sage to convince yourself that a generator can be sacrificed in each case.
Normal subgroups#
Checking normality#
The code below:
begins with the alternating group \(A_4\);
specifies three elements of the group (the three symmetries of the tetrahedron that are 180 degree rotations about axes through midpoints of opposite edges);
uses these three elements to generate a subgroup; and finally
illustrates the command for testing if the subgroup
H
is a normal subgroup of the groupA4
.
sage: A4 = AlternatingGroup(4)
sage: r1 = A4("(1,2) (3,4)")
sage: r2 = A4("(1,3) (2,4)")
sage: r3 = A4("(1,4) (2,3)")
sage: H = A4.subgroup([r1, r2, r3])
sage: H.is_normal(A4)
True
Quotient group#
Extending the previous example, we can create the quotient (factor) group of \(A_4\) by \(H\). The commands
sage: A4 = AlternatingGroup(4)
sage: r1 = A4("(1,2) (3,4)")
sage: r2 = A4("(1,3) (2,4)")
sage: r3 = A4("(1,4) (2,3)")
sage: H = A4.subgroup([r1, r2, r3])
sage: A4.quotient(H)
Permutation Group with generators [(1,2,3)]
returns a permutation group generated by (1,2,3)
. As expected
this is a group of order 3. Notice that we do not get back a group of
the actual cosets, but instead we get a group isomorphic to the
factor group.
Simple groups#
It is easy to check to see if a group is void of any normal subgroups. The commands
sage: AlternatingGroup(5).is_simple()
True
sage: AlternatingGroup(4).is_simple()
False
prints True
and then False
.
Composition series#
For any group, it is easy to obtain a composition series. There is an element of randomness in the algorithm, so you may not always get the same results. (But the list of factor groups is unique, according to the Jordan-Hölder theorem.) Also, the subgroups generated sometimes have more generators than necessary, so you might want to “study” each subgroup carefully by checking properties like its order.
An interesting example is:
DihedralGroup(105).composition_series()
The output will be a list of 5 subgroups of \(D_{105}\), each a normal subgroup of its predecessor.
Several other series are possible, such as the derived series. Use tab-completion to see the possibilities.
Conjugacy#
Given a group \(G\), we can define a relation \(\sim\) on \(G\) by: for \(a,b \in G\), \(a \sim b\) if and only if there exists an element \(g \in G\) such that \(gag^{-1} = b\).
Since this is an equivalence relation, there is an associated
partition of the elements of \(G\) into equivalence classes. For this
very important relation, the classes are known as “conjugacy
classes.” A representative of each of these equivalence classes can
be found as follows. Suppose G
is a permutation group, then
G.conjugacy_classes_representatives()
will return a list of
elements of $G$, one per conjugacy class.
Given an element \(g \in G\), the “centralizer” of \(g\) is the set \(C(g) = \{h \in G \mid hgh^{-1} = g\}\), which is a subgroup of \(G\). A theorem tells us that the size of each conjugacy class is the order of the group divided by the order of the centralizer of an element of the class. With the following code we can determine the size of the conjugacy classes of the full symmetric group on 5 symbols:
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(5)
sage: group_order = G.order()
sage: reps = G.conjugacy_classes_representatives()
sage: class_sizes = []
sage: for g in reps:
....: class_sizes.append(group_order / G.centralizer(g).order())
...
sage: class_sizes
[1, 10, 15, 20, 20, 30, 24]
This should produce the list [1, 10, 15, 20, 20, 30, 24]
which you
can check sums to 120, the order of the group. You might be able to
produce this list by counting elements of the group \(S_5\) with
identical cycle structure (which will require a few simple
combinatorial arguments).
Sylow subgroups#
Sylow’s Theorems assert the existence of certain subgroups. For
example, if \(p\) is a prime, and \(p^r\) divides the order of a group
\(G\), then \(G\) must have a subgroup of order \(p^r\). Such a subgroup
could be found among the output of the
conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
command by checking the orders of
the subgroups produced. The map()
command is a quick way
to do this. The symmetric group on 7 symbols, \(S_7\), has order
\(7! = 5040\) and is divisible by \(2^4 = 16\). Let’s find one example
of a subgroup of permutations on 4 symbols with order 16:
sage: G = SymmetricGroup(7)
sage: subgroups = G.conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
sage: list(map(order, subgroups))
[1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 9, 10, 10, 10, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 14, 16, 18, 18, 18, 20, 20, 20, 21, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 24, 36, 36, 36, 36, 40, 42, 48, 48, 48, 60, 60, 72, 72, 72, 72, 120, 120, 120, 120, 144, 168, 240, 360, 720, 2520, 5040]
The map(order, subgroups)
command will apply the order()
function to each of the subgroups in the list subgroups
. The
output is thus a large list of the orders of many subgroups (96 to be
precise). If you count carefully, you will see that the 49-th
subgroup has order 16. You can retrieve this group for further study
by referencing it as subgroups[48]
(remember that counting starts
at zero).
If \(p^r\) is the highest power of \(p\) to divide the order of \(G\), then
a subgroup of order \(p^r\) is known as a “Sylow \(p\)-subgroup.” Sylow’s
Theorems also say any two Sylow \(p\)-subgroups are conjugate, so the
output of conjugacy_classes_subgroups()
should only contain each
Sylow \(p\)-subgroup once. But there is an easier way,
sylow_subgroup(p)
will return one. Notice that the argument of the
command is just the prime $p$, not the full power \(p^r\). Failure to
use a prime will generate an informative error message.
Groups of small order as permutation groups#
We list here constructions, as permutation groups, for all of the groups of order less than 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Size Construction Notes
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 SymmetricGroup(1) Trivial
2 SymmetricGroup(2) Also CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
3 CyclicPermutationGroup(3) Prime order
4 CyclicPermutationGroup(4) Cyclic
4 KleinFourGroup() Abelian, non-cyclic
5 CyclicPermutationGroup(5) Prime order
6 CyclicPermutationGroup(6) Cyclic
6 SymmetricGroup(3) Non-abelian, also DihedralGroup(3)
7 CyclicPermutationGroup(7) Prime order
8 CyclicPermutationGroup(8) Cyclic
8 D1 = CyclicPermutationGroup(4)
D2 = CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
G = direct_product_permgroups([D1,D2]) Abelian, non-cyclic
8 D1 = CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
D2 = CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
D3 = CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
G = direct_product_permgroups([D1,D2,D3]) Abelian, non-cyclic
8 DihedralGroup(4) Non-abelian
8 QuaternionGroup() Quaternions, also DiCyclicGroup(2)
9 CyclicPermutationGroup(9) Cyclic
9 D1 = CyclicPermutationGroup(3)
D2 = CyclicPermutationGroup(3)
G = direct_product_permgroups([D1,D2]) Abelian, non-cyclic
10 CyclicPermutationGroup(10) Cyclic
10 DihedralGroup(5) Non-abelian
11 CyclicPermutationGroup(11) Prime order
12 CyclicPermutationGroup(12) Cyclic
12 D1 = CyclicPermutationGroup(6)
D2 = CyclicPermutationGroup(2)
G = direct_product_permgroups([D1,D2]) Abelian, non-cyclic
12 DihedralGroup(6) Non-abelian
12 AlternatingGroup(4) Non-abelian, symmetries of tetrahedron
12 DiCyclicGroup(3) Non-abelian
Also semi-direct product $Z_3 \rtimes Z_4$
13 CyclicPermutationGroup(13) Prime order
14 CyclicPermutationGroup(14) Cyclic
14 DihedralGroup(7) Non-abelian
15 CyclicPermutationGroup(15) Cyclic
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acknowledgements#
The construction of Sage is the work of many people, and the group theory portion is made possible by the extensive work of the creators of GAP. However, we will single out three people from the Sage team to thank for major contributions toward bringing you the group theory portion of Sage: David Joyner, William Stein, and Robert Bradshaw. Thanks!