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Ree group

In mathematics, a Ree group is a group of Lie type over a finite field constructed by Ree (1960, 1961) from an exceptional automorphism of a Dynkin diagram that reverses the direction of the multiple bonds, generalizing the Suzuki groups found by Suzuki using a different method. They were the last of the infinite families of finite simple groups to be discovered.

Unlike the Steinberg groups, the Ree groups are not given by the points of a connected reductive algebraic group defined over a finite field; in other words, there is no "Ree algebraic group" related to the Ree groups in the same way that (say) unitary groups are related to Steinberg groups. However, there are some exotic pseudo-reductive algebraic groups over non-perfect fields whose construction is related to the construction of Ree groups, as they use the same exotic automorphisms of Dynkin diagrams that change root lengths.

Tits (1960) defined Ree groups over infinite fields of characteristics 2 and 3. Tits (1989) and Hée (1990) introduced Ree groups of infinite-dimensional Kac–Moody algebras.

Construction edit

If X is a Dynkin diagram, Chevalley constructed split algebraic groups corresponding to X, in particular giving groups X(F) with values in a field F. These groups have the following automorphisms:

  • Any endomorphism σ of the field F induces an endomorphism ασ of the group X(F)
  • Any automorphism π of the Dynkin diagram induces an automorphism απ of the group X(F).

The Steinberg and Chevalley groups can be constructed as fixed points of an endomorphism of X(F) for F the algebraic closure of a field. For the Chevalley groups, the automorphism is the Frobenius endomorphism of F, while for the Steinberg groups the automorphism is the Frobenius endomorphism times an automorphism of the Dynkin diagram.

Over fields of characteristic 2 the groups B2(F) and F4(F) and over fields of characteristic 3 the groups G2(F) have an endomorphism whose square is the endomorphism αφ associated to the Frobenius endomorphism φ of the field F. Roughly speaking, this endomorphism απ comes from the order 2 automorphism of the Dynkin diagram where one ignores the lengths of the roots.

Suppose that the field F has an endomorphism σ whose square is the Frobenius endomorphism: σ2 = φ. Then the Ree group is defined to be the group of elements g of X(F) such that απ(g) = ασ(g). If the field F is perfect then απ and αφ are automorphisms, and the Ree group is the group of fixed points of the involution αφπ of X(F).

In the case when F is a finite field of order pk (with p = 2 or 3) there is an endomorphism with square the Frobenius exactly when k = 2n + 1 is odd, in which case it is unique. So this gives the finite Ree groups as subgroups of B2(22n+1), F4(22n+1), and G2(32n+1) fixed by an involution.

Chevalley groups, Steinberg group, and Ree groups edit

The relation between Chevalley groups, Steinberg group, and Ree groups is roughly as follows. Given a Dynkin diagram X, Chevalley constructed a group scheme over the integers Z whose values over finite fields are the Chevalley groups. In general one can take the fixed points of an endomorphism α of X(F) where F is the algebraic closure of a finite field, such that some power of α is some power of the Frobenius endomorphism φ. The three cases are as follows:

  • For Chevalley groups, α = φn for some positive integer n. In this case the group of fixed points is also the group of points of X defined over a finite field.
  • For Steinberg groups, αm = φn for some positive integers m, n with m dividing n and m > 1. In this case the group of fixed points is also the group of points of a twisted (quasisplit) form of X defined over a finite field.
  • For Ree groups, αm = φn for some positive integers m, n with m not dividing n. In practice m=2 and n is odd. Ree groups are not given as the points of some connected algebraic group with values in a field. they are the fixed points of an order m=2 automorphism of a group defined over a field of order pn with n odd, and there is no corresponding field of order pn/2 (although some authors like to pretend there is in their notation for the groups).

Ree groups of type 2B2 edit

The Ree groups of type 2B2 were first found by Suzuki (1960) using a different method, and are usually called Suzuki groups. Ree noticed that they could be constructed from the groups of type B2 using a variation of the construction of Steinberg (1959). Ree realized that a similar construction could be applied to the Dynkin diagrams F4 and G2, leading to two new families of finite simple groups.

Ree groups of type 2G2 edit

The Ree groups of type 2G2(32n+1) were introduced by Ree (1960), who showed that they are all simple except for the first one 2G2(3), which is isomorphic to the automorphism group of SL2(8). Wilson (2010) gave a simplified construction of the Ree groups, as the automorphisms of a 7-dimensional vector space over the field with 32n+1 elements preserving a bilinear form, a trilinear form, and a product satisfying a twisted linearity law.

The Ree group has order q3(q3 + 1)(q − 1) where q = 32n+1

The Schur multiplier is trivial for n ≥ 1 and for 2G2(3)′.

The outer automorphism group is cyclic of order 2n + 1.

The Ree group is also occasionally denoted by Ree(q), R(q), or E2*(q)

The Ree group 2G2(q) has a doubly transitive permutation representation on q3 + 1 points, and more precisely acts as automorphisms of an S(2, q+1, q3+1) Steiner system. It also acts on a 7-dimensional vector space over the field with q elements as it is a subgroup of G2(q).

The 2-sylow subgroups of the Ree groups are elementary abelian of order 8. Walter's theorem shows that the only other non-abelian finite simple groups with abelian Sylow 2-subgroups are the projective special linear groups in dimension 2 and the Janko group J1. These groups also played a role in the discovery of the first modern sporadic group. They have involution centralizers of the form Z/2Z × PSL2(q), and by investigating groups with an involution centralizer of the similar form Z/2Z × PSL2(5) Janko found the sporadic group J1. Kleidman (1988) determined their maximal subgroups.

The Ree groups of type 2G2 are exceptionally hard to characterize. Thompson (1967, 1972, 1977) studied this problem, and was able to show that the structure of such a group is determined by a certain automorphism σ of a finite field of characteristic 3, and that if the square of this automorphism is the Frobenius automorphism then the group is the Ree group. He also gave some complicated conditions satisfied by the automorphism σ. Finally Bombieri (1980) used elimination theory to show that Thompson's conditions implied that σ2 = 3 in all but 178 small cases, that were eliminated using a computer by Odlyzko and Hunt. Bombieri found out about this problem after reading an article about the classification by Gorenstein (1979), who suggested that someone from outside group theory might be able to help solving it. Enguehard (1986) gave a unified account of the solution of this problem by Thompson and Bombieri.

Ree groups of type 2F4 edit

The Ree groups of type 2F4(22n+1) were introduced by Ree (1961). They are simple except for the first one 2F4(2), which Tits (1964) showed has a simple subgroup of index 2, now known as the Tits group. Wilson (2010b) gave a simplified construction of the Ree groups as the symmetries of a 26-dimensional space over the field of order 22n+1 preserving a quadratic form, a cubic form, and a partial multiplication.

The Ree group 2F4(22n+1) has order q12(q6 + 1) (q4 − 1) (q3 + 1) (q − 1) where q = 22n+1. The Schur multiplier is trivial. The outer automorphism group is cyclic of order 2n + 1.

These Ree groups have the unusual property that the Coxeter group of their BN pair is not crystallographic: it is the dihedral group of order 16. Tits (1983) showed that all Moufang octagons come from Ree groups of type 2F4.

See also edit

References edit

  • Carter, Roger W. (1989) [1972], Simple groups of Lie type, Wiley Classics Library, New York: John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-471-50683-6, MR 0407163
  • Bombieri, Enrico (1980), "Thompson's problem (σ2=3)", Inventiones Mathematicae, 58 (1), appendices by Andrew Odlyzko and D. Hunt: 77–100, doi:10.1007/BF01402275, ISSN 0020-9910, MR 0570875, S2CID 122867511
  • Enguehard, Michel (1986), "Caractérisation des groupes de Ree", Astérisque (142): 49–139, ISSN 0303-1179, MR 0873958
  • Gorenstein, D. (1979), "The classification of finite simple groups. I. Simple groups and local analysis", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, New Series, 1 (1): 43–199, doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1979-14551-8, ISSN 0002-9904, MR 0513750
  • Hée, Jean-Yves (1990), "Construction de groupes tordus en théorie de Kac-Moody", Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série I, 310 (3): 77–80, ISSN 0764-4442, MR 1044619
  • Kleidman, Peter B. (1988), "The maximal subgroups of the Chevalley groups G2(q) with q odd, the Ree groups 2G2(q), and their automorphism groups", Journal of Algebra, 117 (1): 30–71, doi:10.1016/0021-8693(88)90239-6, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 0955589
  • Ree, Rimhak (1960), "A family of simple groups associated with the simple Lie algebra of type (G2)", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 66 (6): 508–510, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1960-10523-X, ISSN 0002-9904, MR 0125155
  • Ree, Rimhak (1961), "A family of simple groups associated with the simple Lie algebra of type (F4)", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 67: 115–116, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1961-10527-2, ISSN 0002-9904, MR 0125155
  • Steinberg, Robert (1959), "Variations on a theme of Chevalley", Pacific Journal of Mathematics, 9 (3): 875–891, doi:10.2140/pjm.1959.9.875, ISSN 0030-8730, MR 0109191
  • Steinberg, Robert (1968), , Yale University, New Haven, Conn., MR 0466335, archived from the original on 2012-09-10
  • Steinberg, Robert (1968), Endomorphisms of linear algebraic groups, Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society, No. 80, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 9780821812808, MR 0230728
  • Suzuki, Michio (1960), "A new type of simple groups of finite order", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 46 (6): 868–870, doi:10.1073/pnas.46.6.868, ISSN 0027-8424, JSTOR 70960, MR 0120283, PMC 222949, PMID 16590684
  • Thompson, John G. (1967), "Toward a characterization of E2*(q)", Journal of Algebra, 7 (3): 406–414, doi:10.1016/0021-8693(67)90080-4, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 0223448
  • Thompson, John G. (1972), "Toward a characterization of E2*(q) . II", Journal of Algebra, 20 (3): 610–621, doi:10.1016/0021-8693(72)90074-9, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 0313377
  • Thompson, John G. (1977), "Toward a characterization of E2*(q) . III", Journal of Algebra, 49 (1): 162–166, doi:10.1016/0021-8693(77)90276-9, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 0453858
  • Tits, Jacques (1960), "Les groupes simples de Suzuki et de Ree", Séminaire Bourbaki, Vol. 6, Paris: Société Mathématique de France, pp. 65–82, MR 1611778
  • Tits, Jacques (1964), "Algebraic and abstract simple groups", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 80 (2): 313–329, doi:10.2307/1970394, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 1970394, MR 0164968
  • Tits, Jacques (1983), "Moufang octagons and the Ree groups of type 2F4", American Journal of Mathematics, 105 (2): 539–594, doi:10.2307/2374268, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2374268, MR 0701569
  • Tits, Jacques (1989), "Groupes associés aux algèbres de Kac-Moody", Astérisque, Séminaire Bourbaki (177): 7–31, ISSN 0303-1179, MR 1040566
  • Wilson, Robert A. (2010), "Another new approach to the small Ree groups", Archiv der Mathematik, 94 (6): 501–510, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.156.9909, doi:10.1007/s00013-010-0130-4, ISSN 0003-9268, MR 2653666, S2CID 122724281
  • Wilson, Robert A. (2010b), "A simple construction of the Ree groups of type 2F4", Journal of Algebra, 323 (5): 1468–1481, doi:10.1016/j.jalgebra.2009.11.015, ISSN 0021-8693, MR 2584965

External links edit

  • ATLAS: Ree group R(27)

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In mathematics a Ree group is a group of Lie type over a finite field constructed by Ree 1960 1961 from an exceptional automorphism of a Dynkin diagram that reverses the direction of the multiple bonds generalizing the Suzuki groups found by Suzuki using a different method They were the last of the infinite families of finite simple groups to be discovered Unlike the Steinberg groups the Ree groups are not given by the points of a connected reductive algebraic group defined over a finite field in other words there is no Ree algebraic group related to the Ree groups in the same way that say unitary groups are related to Steinberg groups However there are some exotic pseudo reductive algebraic groups over non perfect fields whose construction is related to the construction of Ree groups as they use the same exotic automorphisms of Dynkin diagrams that change root lengths Tits 1960 defined Ree groups over infinite fields of characteristics 2 and 3 Tits 1989 and Hee 1990 introduced Ree groups of infinite dimensional Kac Moody algebras Contents 1 Construction 2 Chevalley groups Steinberg group and Ree groups 3 Ree groups of type 2B2 4 Ree groups of type 2G2 5 Ree groups of type 2F4 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksConstruction editIf X is a Dynkin diagram Chevalley constructed split algebraic groups corresponding to X in particular giving groups X F with values in a field F These groups have the following automorphisms Any endomorphism s of the field F induces an endomorphism as of the group X F Any automorphism p of the Dynkin diagram induces an automorphism ap of the group X F The Steinberg and Chevalley groups can be constructed as fixed points of an endomorphism of X F for F the algebraic closure of a field For the Chevalley groups the automorphism is the Frobenius endomorphism of F while for the Steinberg groups the automorphism is the Frobenius endomorphism times an automorphism of the Dynkin diagram Over fields of characteristic 2 the groups B2 F and F4 F and over fields of characteristic 3 the groups G2 F have an endomorphism whose square is the endomorphism af associated to the Frobenius endomorphism f of the field F Roughly speaking this endomorphism ap comes from the order 2 automorphism of the Dynkin diagram where one ignores the lengths of the roots Suppose that the field F has an endomorphism s whose square is the Frobenius endomorphism s2 f Then the Ree group is defined to be the group of elements g of X F such that ap g as g If the field F is perfect then ap and af are automorphisms and the Ree group is the group of fixed points of the involution af ap of X F In the case when F is a finite field of order pk with p 2 or 3 there is an endomorphism with square the Frobenius exactly when k 2n 1 is odd in which case it is unique So this gives the finite Ree groups as subgroups of B2 22n 1 F4 22n 1 and G2 32n 1 fixed by an involution Chevalley groups Steinberg group and Ree groups editThe relation between Chevalley groups Steinberg group and Ree groups is roughly as follows Given a Dynkin diagram X Chevalley constructed a group scheme over the integers Z whose values over finite fields are the Chevalley groups In general one can take the fixed points of an endomorphism a of X F where F is the algebraic closure of a finite field such that some power of a is some power of the Frobenius endomorphism f The three cases are as follows For Chevalley groups a fn for some positive integer n In this case the group of fixed points is also the group of points of X defined over a finite field For Steinberg groups am fn for some positive integers m n with m dividing n and m gt 1 In this case the group of fixed points is also the group of points of a twisted quasisplit form of X defined over a finite field For Ree groups am fn for some positive integers m n with m not dividing n In practice m 2 and n is odd Ree groups are not given as the points of some connected algebraic group with values in a field they are the fixed points of an order m 2 automorphism of a group defined over a field of order pn with n odd and there is no corresponding field of order pn 2 although some authors like to pretend there is in their notation for the groups Ree groups of type 2B2 editMain article Suzuki groups The Ree groups of type 2B2 were first found by Suzuki 1960 using a different method and are usually called Suzuki groups Ree noticed that they could be constructed from the groups of type B2 using a variation of the construction of Steinberg 1959 Ree realized that a similar construction could be applied to the Dynkin diagrams F4 and G2 leading to two new families of finite simple groups Ree groups of type 2G2 editThe Ree groups of type 2G2 32n 1 were introduced by Ree 1960 who showed that they are all simple except for the first one 2G2 3 which is isomorphic to the automorphism group of SL2 8 Wilson 2010 gave a simplified construction of the Ree groups as the automorphisms of a 7 dimensional vector space over the field with 32n 1 elements preserving a bilinear form a trilinear form and a product satisfying a twisted linearity law The Ree group has order q3 q3 1 q 1 where q 32n 1The Schur multiplier is trivial for n 1 and for 2G2 3 The outer automorphism group is cyclic of order 2n 1 The Ree group is also occasionally denoted by Ree q R q or E2 q The Ree group 2G2 q has a doubly transitive permutation representation on q3 1 points and more precisely acts as automorphisms of an S 2 q 1 q3 1 Steiner system It also acts on a 7 dimensional vector space over the field with q elements as it is a subgroup of G2 q The 2 sylow subgroups of the Ree groups are elementary abelian of order 8 Walter s theorem shows that the only other non abelian finite simple groups with abelian Sylow 2 subgroups are the projective special linear groups in dimension 2 and the Janko group J1 These groups also played a role in the discovery of the first modern sporadic group They have involution centralizers of the form Z 2Z PSL2 q and by investigating groups with an involution centralizer of the similar form Z 2Z PSL2 5 Janko found the sporadic group J1 Kleidman 1988 determined their maximal subgroups The Ree groups of type 2G2 are exceptionally hard to characterize Thompson 1967 1972 1977 studied this problem and was able to show that the structure of such a group is determined by a certain automorphism s of a finite field of characteristic 3 and that if the square of this automorphism is the Frobenius automorphism then the group is the Ree group He also gave some complicated conditions satisfied by the automorphism s Finally Bombieri 1980 used elimination theory to show that Thompson s conditions implied that s2 3 in all but 178 small cases that were eliminated using a computer by Odlyzko and Hunt Bombieri found out about this problem after reading an article about the classification by Gorenstein 1979 who suggested that someone from outside group theory might be able to help solving it Enguehard 1986 gave a unified account of the solution of this problem by Thompson and Bombieri Ree groups of type 2F4 editThe Ree groups of type 2F4 22n 1 were introduced by Ree 1961 They are simple except for the first one 2F4 2 which Tits 1964 showed has a simple subgroup of index 2 now known as the Tits group Wilson 2010b gave a simplified construction of the Ree groups as the symmetries of a 26 dimensional space over the field of order 22n 1 preserving a quadratic form a cubic form and a partial multiplication The Ree group 2F4 22n 1 has order q12 q6 1 q4 1 q3 1 q 1 where q 22n 1 The Schur multiplier is trivial The outer automorphism group is cyclic of order 2n 1 These Ree groups have the unusual property that the Coxeter group of their BN pair is not crystallographic it is the dihedral group of order 16 Tits 1983 showed that all Moufang octagons come from Ree groups of type 2F4 See also edit nbsp Mathematics portal List of finite simple groupsReferences editCarter Roger W 1989 1972 Simple groups of Lie type Wiley Classics Library New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 50683 6 MR 0407163 Bombieri Enrico 1980 Thompson s problem s2 3 Inventiones Mathematicae 58 1 appendices by Andrew Odlyzko and D Hunt 77 100 doi 10 1007 BF01402275 ISSN 0020 9910 MR 0570875 S2CID 122867511 Enguehard Michel 1986 Caracterisation des groupes de Ree Asterisque 142 49 139 ISSN 0303 1179 MR 0873958 Gorenstein D 1979 The classification of finite simple groups I Simple groups and local analysis Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society New Series 1 1 43 199 doi 10 1090 S0273 0979 1979 14551 8 ISSN 0002 9904 MR 0513750 Hee Jean Yves 1990 Construction de groupes tordus en theorie de Kac Moody Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie I 310 3 77 80 ISSN 0764 4442 MR 1044619 Kleidman Peter B 1988 The maximal subgroups of the Chevalley groups G2 q with q odd the Ree groups 2G2 q and their automorphism groups Journal of Algebra 117 1 30 71 doi 10 1016 0021 8693 88 90239 6 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 0955589 Ree Rimhak 1960 A family of simple groups associated with the simple Lie algebra of type G2 Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 66 6 508 510 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1960 10523 X ISSN 0002 9904 MR 0125155 Ree Rimhak 1961 A family of simple groups associated with the simple Lie algebra of type F4 Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 67 115 116 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1961 10527 2 ISSN 0002 9904 MR 0125155 Steinberg Robert 1959 Variations on a theme of Chevalley Pacific Journal of Mathematics 9 3 875 891 doi 10 2140 pjm 1959 9 875 ISSN 0030 8730 MR 0109191 Steinberg Robert 1968 Lectures on Chevalley groups Yale University New Haven Conn MR 0466335 archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Steinberg Robert 1968 Endomorphisms of linear algebraic groups Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society No 80 Providence R I American Mathematical Society ISBN 9780821812808 MR 0230728 Suzuki Michio 1960 A new type of simple groups of finite order Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 46 6 868 870 doi 10 1073 pnas 46 6 868 ISSN 0027 8424 JSTOR 70960 MR 0120283 PMC 222949 PMID 16590684 Thompson John G 1967 Toward a characterization of E2 q Journal of Algebra 7 3 406 414 doi 10 1016 0021 8693 67 90080 4 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 0223448 Thompson John G 1972 Toward a characterization of E2 q II Journal of Algebra 20 3 610 621 doi 10 1016 0021 8693 72 90074 9 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 0313377 Thompson John G 1977 Toward a characterization of E2 q III Journal of Algebra 49 1 162 166 doi 10 1016 0021 8693 77 90276 9 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 0453858 Tits Jacques 1960 Les groupes simples de Suzuki et de Ree Seminaire Bourbaki Vol 6 Paris Societe Mathematique de France pp 65 82 MR 1611778 Tits Jacques 1964 Algebraic and abstract simple groups Annals of Mathematics Second Series 80 2 313 329 doi 10 2307 1970394 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 1970394 MR 0164968 Tits Jacques 1983 Moufang octagons and the Ree groups of type 2F4 American Journal of Mathematics 105 2 539 594 doi 10 2307 2374268 ISSN 0002 9327 JSTOR 2374268 MR 0701569 Tits Jacques 1989 Groupes associes aux algebres de Kac Moody Asterisque Seminaire Bourbaki 177 7 31 ISSN 0303 1179 MR 1040566 Wilson Robert A 2010 Another new approach to the small Ree groups Archiv der Mathematik 94 6 501 510 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 156 9909 doi 10 1007 s00013 010 0130 4 ISSN 0003 9268 MR 2653666 S2CID 122724281 Wilson Robert A 2010b A simple construction of the Ree groups of type 2F4 Journal of Algebra 323 5 1468 1481 doi 10 1016 j jalgebra 2009 11 015 ISSN 0021 8693 MR 2584965External links editATLAS Ree group R 27 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ree group amp oldid 1188035610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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