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Prove:
For any positive integer d|24 and d != 4,
the subgroups of order d in S4 are isomorphic.
What about subgroups of order 4?
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Which leaves 4, 6 and 8. As
does not have any cyclic subgroup of order 6 (if it did it would have to have either a 6-cycle or a disjoint product of a 2-cycle and a 3-cycle, neither of which is possible) all subgroups of order 6 are thus isomorphic (to ). As for 8, notice that . Hence every subgroup of order 8 is a Sylow 2-subgroup; therefore all subgroups of order 8 are conjugate and therefore isomorphic (to the dihedral group ). has two nonisomorphic subgroups of order 4, namely (cyclic) and (the Klein Viergruppe).Last edited by JaneFairfax (2009-09-19 04:15:56)
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Thank you for answering.
Could you explain "As S4 does not have any cyclic subgroup of order 6 (if it did it would have to have either a 6-cycle or a disjoint product of a 2-cycle and a 3-cycle, neither of which is possible) all subgroups of order 6 are thus isomorphic (to S3 )."in detail(Why S4 does not have any cyclic subgroup of order 6=>all subgroups of order 6 are thus isomorphic (to S3 ))?
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There are only two groups of order 6 up to isomorphism: S3 and Z6 (note D3 is isomorphic to S3).
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
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"There are only two groups of order 6 up to isomorphism" Why?
Is there any simple explanation?
I'm just a beginner in basic group theory.
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Let G be a group of order 6. An easy way is to use Sylow's theorem which proves that G is a semi-direct product of Z2 and Z3, which can give rise to at most 2 groups. And here they are: S3 and Z6.
But this uses a bit of machinery. If you know group actions, then you can let G and on H, a nonnormal subgroup of G of order 2. Prove that this action is faithful, and then of course it goes into S3, and you're done.
It is also possible to prove that G = {1, x, x^2, y, z, w} where x is of order 3, y, z, and w all have order 2. Then using the fact that G is a subgroup of S4, you should be able to prove that y, z, and w are all transpositions. Given this, it should only take a few calculations to show that x, y, z, and w are permutations of only 3 letters (numbers).
"In the real world, this would be a problem. But in mathematics, we can just define a place where this problem doesn't exist. So we'll go ahead and do that now..."
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Thanks a lot!!
Now I can finish my homework:D
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