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Symmetric group

In abstract algebra, the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself, and whose group operation is the composition of functions. In particular, the finite symmetric group defined over a finite set of symbols consists of the permutations that can be performed on the symbols.[1] Since there are ( factorial) such permutation operations, the order (number of elements) of the symmetric group is .

A Cayley graph of the symmetric group S4
Cayley table, with header omitted, of the symmetric group S3. The elements are represented as matrices. To the left of the matrices, are their two-line form. The black arrows indicate disjoint cycles and correspond to cycle notation. Green circle is an odd permutation, white is an even permutation and black is the identity.

These are the positions of the six matrices

Some matrices are not arranged symmetrically to the main diagonal – thus the symmetric group is not abelian.

Although symmetric groups can be defined on infinite sets, this article focuses on the finite symmetric groups: their applications, their elements, their conjugacy classes, a finite presentation, their subgroups, their automorphism groups, and their representation theory. For the remainder of this article, "symmetric group" will mean a symmetric group on a finite set.

The symmetric group is important to diverse areas of mathematics such as Galois theory, invariant theory, the representation theory of Lie groups, and combinatorics. Cayley's theorem states that every group is isomorphic to a subgroup of the symmetric group on (the underlying set of) .

Definition and first properties

The symmetric group on a finite set   is the group whose elements are all bijective functions from   to   and whose group operation is that of function composition.[1] For finite sets, "permutations" and "bijective functions" refer to the same operation, namely rearrangement. The symmetric group of degree   is the symmetric group on the set  .

The symmetric group on a set   is denoted in various ways, including  ,  ,  ,  , and  .[1] If   is the set   then the name may be abbreviated to  ,  ,  , or  .[1]

Symmetric groups on infinite sets behave quite differently from symmetric groups on finite sets, and are discussed in (Scott 1987, Ch. 11), (Dixon & Mortimer 1996, Ch. 8), and (Cameron 1999).

The symmetric group on a set of   elements has order   (the factorial of  ).[2] It is abelian if and only if   is less than or equal to 2.[3] For   and   (the empty set and the singleton set), the symmetric groups are trivial (they have order  ). The group Sn is solvable if and only if  . This is an essential part of the proof of the Abel–Ruffini theorem that shows that for every   there are polynomials of degree   which are not solvable by radicals, that is, the solutions cannot be expressed by performing a finite number of operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and root extraction on the polynomial's coefficients.

Applications

The symmetric group on a set of size n is the Galois group of the general polynomial of degree n and plays an important role in Galois theory. In invariant theory, the symmetric group acts on the variables of a multi-variate function, and the functions left invariant are the so-called symmetric functions. In the representation theory of Lie groups, the representation theory of the symmetric group plays a fundamental role through the ideas of Schur functors.

In the theory of Coxeter groups, the symmetric group is the Coxeter group of type An and occurs as the Weyl group of the general linear group. In combinatorics, the symmetric groups, their elements (permutations), and their representations provide a rich source of problems involving Young tableaux, plactic monoids, and the Bruhat order. Subgroups of symmetric groups are called permutation groups and are widely studied because of their importance in understanding group actions, homogeneous spaces, and automorphism groups of graphs, such as the Higman–Sims group and the Higman–Sims graph.

Group properties and special elements

The elements of the symmetric group on a set X are the permutations of X.

Multiplication

The group operation in a symmetric group is function composition, denoted by the symbol ∘ or simply by just a composition of the permutations. The composition fg of permutations f and g, pronounced "f of g", maps any element x of X to f(g(x)). Concretely, let (see permutation for an explanation of notation):

 
 

Applying f after g maps 1 first to 2 and then 2 to itself; 2 to 5 and then to 4; 3 to 4 and then to 5, and so on. So composing f and g gives

 

A cycle of length L = k · m, taken to the kth power, will decompose into k cycles of length m: For example, (k = 2, m = 3),

 

Verification of group axioms

To check that the symmetric group on a set X is indeed a group, it is necessary to verify the group axioms of closure, associativity, identity, and inverses.[4]

  1. The operation of function composition is closed in the set of permutations of the given set X.
  2. Function composition is always associative.
  3. The trivial bijection that assigns each element of X to itself serves as an identity for the group.
  4. Every bijection has an inverse function that undoes its action, and thus each element of a symmetric group does have an inverse which is a permutation too.

Transpositions, sign, and the alternating group

A transposition is a permutation which exchanges two elements and keeps all others fixed; for example (1 3) is a transposition. Every permutation can be written as a product of transpositions; for instance, the permutation g from above can be written as g = (1 2)(2 5)(3 4). Since g can be written as a product of an odd number of transpositions, it is then called an odd permutation, whereas f is an even permutation.

The representation of a permutation as a product of transpositions is not unique; however, the number of transpositions needed to represent a given permutation is either always even or always odd. There are several short proofs of the invariance of this parity of a permutation.

The product of two even permutations is even, the product of two odd permutations is even, and all other products are odd. Thus we can define the sign of a permutation:

 

With this definition,

 

is a group homomorphism ({+1, −1} is a group under multiplication, where +1 is e, the neutral element). The kernel of this homomorphism, that is, the set of all even permutations, is called the alternating group An. It is a normal subgroup of Sn, and for n ≥ 2 it has n!/2 elements. The group Sn is the semidirect product of An and any subgroup generated by a single transposition.

Furthermore, every permutation can be written as a product of adjacent transpositions, that is, transpositions of the form (a a+1). For instance, the permutation g from above can also be written as g = (4 5)(3 4)(4 5)(1 2)(2 3)(3 4)(4 5). The sorting algorithm bubble sort is an application of this fact. The representation of a permutation as a product of adjacent transpositions is also not unique.

Cycles

A cycle of length k is a permutation f for which there exists an element x in {1, ..., n} such that x, f(x), f2(x), ..., fk(x) = x are the only elements moved by f; it is required that k ≥ 2 since with k = 1 the element x itself would not be moved either. The permutation h defined by

 

is a cycle of length three, since h(1) = 4, h(4) = 3 and h(3) = 1, leaving 2 and 5 untouched. We denote such a cycle by (1 4 3), but it could equally well be written (4 3 1) or (3 1 4) by starting at a different point. The order of a cycle is equal to its length. Cycles of length two are transpositions. Two cycles are disjoint if they have disjoint subsets of elements. Disjoint cycles commute: for example, in S6 there is the equality (4 1 3)(2 5 6) = (2 5 6)(4 1 3). Every element of Sn can be written as a product of disjoint cycles; this representation is unique up to the order of the factors, and the freedom present in representing each individual cycle by choosing its starting point.

Cycles admit the following conjugation property with any permutation  , this property is often used to obtain its generators and relations.

 

Special elements

Certain elements of the symmetric group of {1, 2, ..., n} are of particular interest (these can be generalized to the symmetric group of any finite totally ordered set, but not to that of an unordered set).

The order reversing permutation is the one given by:

 

This is the unique maximal element with respect to the Bruhat order and the longest element in the symmetric group with respect to generating set consisting of the adjacent transpositions (i i+1), 1 ≤ in − 1.

This is an involution, and consists of   (non-adjacent) transpositions

 
 

so it thus has sign:

 

which is 4-periodic in n.

In S2n, the perfect shuffle is the permutation that splits the set into 2 piles and interleaves them. Its sign is also  

Note that the reverse on n elements and perfect shuffle on 2n elements have the same sign; these are important to the classification of Clifford algebras, which are 8-periodic.

Conjugacy classes

The conjugacy classes of Sn correspond to the cycle types of permutations; that is, two elements of Sn are conjugate in Sn if and only if they consist of the same number of disjoint cycles of the same lengths. For instance, in S5, (1 2 3)(4 5) and (1 4 3)(2 5) are conjugate; (1 2 3)(4 5) and (1 2)(4 5) are not. A conjugating element of Sn can be constructed in "two line notation" by placing the "cycle notations" of the two conjugate permutations on top of one another. Continuing the previous example,

 
which can be written as the product of cycles as (2 4). This permutation then relates (1 2 3)(4 5) and (1 4 3)(2 5) via conjugation, that is,
 
It is clear that such a permutation is not unique.

Conjugacy classes of   correspond to integer partitions of  : to the partition   with   and  , is associated the set   of permutations with cycles of lengths  . Then   is a conjugacy class of  , whose elements are said to be of cycle-type  .

Low degree groups

The low-degree symmetric groups have simpler and exceptional structure, and often must be treated separately.

S0 and S1
The symmetric groups on the empty set and the singleton set are trivial, which corresponds to 0! = 1! = 1. In this case the alternating group agrees with the symmetric group, rather than being an index 2 subgroup, and the sign map is trivial. In the case of S0, its only member is the empty function.
S2
This group consists of exactly two elements: the identity and the permutation swapping the two points. It is a cyclic group and is thus abelian. In Galois theory, this corresponds to the fact that the quadratic formula gives a direct solution to the general quadratic polynomial after extracting only a single root. In invariant theory, the representation theory of the symmetric group on two points is quite simple and is seen as writing a function of two variables as a sum of its symmetric and anti-symmetric parts: Setting fs(x, y) = f(x, y) + f(y, x), and fa(x, y) = f(x, y) − f(y, x), one gets that 2⋅f = fs + fa. This process is known as symmetrization.
S3
S3 is the first nonabelian symmetric group. This group is isomorphic to the dihedral group of order 6, the group of reflection and rotation symmetries of an equilateral triangle, since these symmetries permute the three vertices of the triangle. Cycles of length two correspond to reflections, and cycles of length three are rotations. In Galois theory, the sign map from S3 to S2 corresponds to the resolving quadratic for a cubic polynomial, as discovered by Gerolamo Cardano, while the A3 kernel corresponds to the use of the discrete Fourier transform of order 3 in the solution, in the form of Lagrange resolvents.[citation needed]
S4
The group S4 is isomorphic to the group of proper rotations about opposite faces, opposite diagonals and opposite edges, 9, 8 and 6 permutations, of the cube.[5] Beyond the group A4, S4 has a Klein four-group V as a proper normal subgroup, namely the even transpositions {(1), (1 2)(3 4), (1 3)(2 4), (1 4)(2 3)}, with quotient S3. In Galois theory, this map corresponds to the resolving cubic to a quartic polynomial, which allows the quartic to be solved by radicals, as established by Lodovico Ferrari. The Klein group can be understood in terms of the Lagrange resolvents of the quartic. The map from S4 to S3 also yields a 2-dimensional irreducible representation, which is an irreducible representation of a symmetric group of degree n of dimension below n − 1, which only occurs for n = 4.
S5
S5 is the first non-solvable symmetric group. Along with the special linear group SL(2, 5) and the icosahedral group A5 × S2, S5 is one of the three non-solvable groups of order 120, up to isomorphism. S5 is the Galois group of the general quintic equation, and the fact that S5 is not a solvable group translates into the non-existence of a general formula to solve quintic polynomials by radicals. There is an exotic inclusion map S5 → S6 as a transitive subgroup; the obvious inclusion map Sn → Sn+1 fixes a point and thus is not transitive. This yields the outer automorphism of S6, discussed below, and corresponds to the resolvent sextic of a quintic.
S6
Unlike all other symmetric groups, S6, has an outer automorphism. Using the language of Galois theory, this can also be understood in terms of Lagrange resolvents. The resolvent of a quintic is of degree 6—this corresponds to an exotic inclusion map S5 → S6 as a transitive subgroup (the obvious inclusion map Sn → Sn+1 fixes a point and thus is not transitive) and, while this map does not make the general quintic solvable, it yields the exotic outer automorphism of S6—see Automorphisms of the symmetric and alternating groups for details.
Note that while A6 and A7 have an exceptional Schur multiplier (a triple cover) and that these extend to triple covers of S6 and S7, these do not correspond to exceptional Schur multipliers of the symmetric group.

Maps between symmetric groups

Other than the trivial map Sn → C1 ≅ S0 ≅ S1 and the sign map Sn → S2, the most notable homomorphisms between symmetric groups, in order of relative dimension, are:

  • S4 → S3 corresponding to the exceptional normal subgroup V < A4 < S4;
  • S6 → S6 (or rather, a class of such maps up to inner automorphism) corresponding to the outer automorphism of S6.
  • S5 → S6 as a transitive subgroup, yielding the outer automorphism of S6 as discussed above.

There are also a host of other homomorphisms Sm → Sn where m < n.

Relation with alternating group

For n ≥ 5, the alternating group An is simple, and the induced quotient is the sign map: An → Sn → S2 which is split by taking a transposition of two elements. Thus Sn is the semidirect product An ⋊ S2, and has no other proper normal subgroups, as they would intersect An in either the identity (and thus themselves be the identity or a 2-element group, which is not normal), or in An (and thus themselves be An or Sn).

Sn acts on its subgroup An by conjugation, and for n ≠ 6, Sn is the full automorphism group of An: Aut(An) ≅ Sn. Conjugation by even elements are inner automorphisms of An while the outer automorphism of An of order 2 corresponds to conjugation by an odd element. For n = 6, there is an exceptional outer automorphism of An so Sn is not the full automorphism group of An.

Conversely, for n ≠ 6, Sn has no outer automorphisms, and for n ≠ 2 it has no center, so for n ≠ 2, 6 it is a complete group, as discussed in automorphism group, below.

For n ≥ 5, Sn is an almost simple group, as it lies between the simple group An and its group of automorphisms.

Sn can be embedded into An+2 by appending the transposition (n + 1, n + 2) to all odd permutations, while embedding into An+1 is impossible for n > 1.

Generators and relations

The symmetric group on n letters is generated by the adjacent transpositions   that swap i and i + 1.[6] The collection   generates Sn subject to the following relations:[7]

  •  
  •   for  , and
  •  

where 1 represents the identity permutation. This representation endows the symmetric group with the structure of a Coxeter group (and so also a reflection group).

Other possible generating sets include the set of transpositions that swap 1 and i for 2 ≤ in,[citation needed] and a set containing any n-cycle and a 2-cycle of adjacent elements in the n-cycle.[8]

Subgroup structure

A subgroup of a symmetric group is called a permutation group.

Normal subgroups

The normal subgroups of the finite symmetric groups are well understood. If n ≤ 2, Sn has at most 2 elements, and so has no nontrivial proper subgroups. The alternating group of degree n is always a normal subgroup, a proper one for n ≥ 2 and nontrivial for n ≥ 3; for n ≥ 3 it is in fact the only nontrivial proper normal subgroup of Sn, except when n = 4 where there is one additional such normal subgroup, which is isomorphic to the Klein four group.

The symmetric group on an infinite set does not have a subgroup of index 2, as Vitali (1915[9]) proved that each permutation can be written as a product of three squares. However it contains the normal subgroup S of permutations that fix all but finitely many elements, which is generated by transpositions. Those elements of S that are products of an even number of transpositions form a subgroup of index 2 in S, called the alternating subgroup A. Since A is even a characteristic subgroup of S, it is also a normal subgroup of the full symmetric group of the infinite set. The groups A and S are the only nontrivial proper normal subgroups of the symmetric group on a countably infinite set. This was first proved by Onofri (1929[10]) and independently SchreierUlam (1934[11]). For more details see (Scott 1987, Ch. 11.3) or (Dixon & Mortimer 1996, Ch. 8.1).

Maximal subgroups

The maximal subgroups of Sn fall into three classes: the intransitive, the imprimitive, and the primitive. The intransitive maximal subgroups are exactly those of the form Sk × Snk for 1 ≤ k < n/2. The imprimitive maximal subgroups are exactly those of the form Sk wr Sn/k, where 2 ≤ kn/2 is a proper divisor of n and "wr" denotes the wreath product. The primitive maximal subgroups are more difficult to identify, but with the assistance of the O'Nan–Scott theorem and the classification of finite simple groups, (Liebeck, Praeger & Saxl 1988) gave a fairly satisfactory description of the maximal subgroups of this type, according to (Dixon & Mortimer 1996, p. 268).

Sylow subgroups

The Sylow subgroups of the symmetric groups are important examples of p-groups. They are more easily described in special cases first:

The Sylow p-subgroups of the symmetric group of degree p are just the cyclic subgroups generated by p-cycles. There are (p − 1)!/(p − 1) = (p − 2)! such subgroups simply by counting generators. The normalizer therefore has order p⋅(p − 1) and is known as a Frobenius group Fp(p−1) (especially for p = 5), and is the affine general linear group, AGL(1, p).

The Sylow p-subgroups of the symmetric group of degree p2 are the wreath product of two cyclic groups of order p. For instance, when p = 3, a Sylow 3-subgroup of Sym(9) is generated by a = (1 4 7)(2 5 8)(3 6 9) and the elements x = (1 2 3), y = (4 5 6), z = (7 8 9), and every element of the Sylow 3-subgroup has the form aixjykzl for  .

The Sylow p-subgroups of the symmetric group of degree pn are sometimes denoted Wp(n), and using this notation one has that Wp(n + 1) is the wreath product of Wp(n) and Wp(1).

In general, the Sylow p-subgroups of the symmetric group of degree n are a direct product of ai copies of Wp(i), where 0 ≤ aip − 1 and n = a0 + pa1 + ... + pkak (the base p expansion of n).

For instance, W2(1) = C2 and W2(2) = D8, the dihedral group of order 8, and so a Sylow 2-subgroup of the symmetric group of degree 7 is generated by { (1,3)(2,4), (1,2), (3,4), (5,6) } and is isomorphic to D8 × C2.

These calculations are attributed to (Kaloujnine 1948) and described in more detail in (Rotman 1995, p. 176). Note however that (Kerber 1971, p. 26) attributes the result to an 1844 work of Cauchy, and mentions that it is even covered in textbook form in (Netto 1882, §39–40).

Transitive subgroups

A transitive subgroup of Sn is a subgroup whose action on {1, 2, ,..., n} is transitive. For example, the Galois group of a (finite) Galois extension is a transitive subgroup of Sn, for some n.

Cayley's theorem

Cayley's theorem states that every group G is isomorphic to a subgroup of some symmetric group. In particular, one may take a subgroup of the symmetric group on the elements of G, since every group acts on itself faithfully by (left or right) multiplication.

Cyclic subgroups

Cyclic groups are those that are generated by a single permutation. When a permutation is represented in cycle notation, the order of the cyclic subgroup that it generates is the least common multiple of the lengths of its cycles. For example, in S5, one cyclic subgroup of order 5 is generated by (13254), whereas the largest cyclic subgroups of S5 are generated by elements like (123)(45) that have one cycle of length 3 and another cycle of length 2. This rules out many groups as possible subgroups of symmetric groups of a given size.[citation needed] For example, S5 has no subgroup of order 15 (a divisor of the order of S5), because the only group of order 15 is the cyclic group. The largest possible order of a cyclic subgroup (equivalently, the largest possible order of an element in Sn) is given by Landau's function.

Automorphism group

n Aut(Sn) Out(Sn) Z(Sn)
n ≠ 2, 6 Sn C1 C1
n = 2 C1 C1 S2
n = 6 S6 ⋊ C2 C2 C1

For n ≠ 2, 6, Sn is a complete group: its center and outer automorphism group are both trivial.

For n = 2, the automorphism group is trivial, but S2 is not trivial: it is isomorphic to C2, which is abelian, and hence the center is the whole group.

For n = 6, it has an outer automorphism of order 2: Out(S6) = C2, and the automorphism group is a semidirect product Aut(S6) = S6 ⋊ C2.

In fact, for any set X of cardinality other than 6, every automorphism of the symmetric group on X is inner, a result first due to (Schreier & Ulam 1936) according to (Dixon & Mortimer 1996, p. 259).

Homology

The group homology of Sn is quite regular and stabilizes: the first homology (concretely, the abelianization) is:

 

The first homology group is the abelianization, and corresponds to the sign map Sn → S2 which is the abelianization for n ≥ 2; for n < 2 the symmetric group is trivial. This homology is easily computed as follows: Sn is generated by involutions (2-cycles, which have order 2), so the only non-trivial maps Sn → Cp are to S2 and all involutions are conjugate, hence map to the same element in the abelianization (since conjugation is trivial in abelian groups). Thus the only possible maps Sn → S2 ≅ {±1} send an involution to 1 (the trivial map) or to −1 (the sign map). One must also show that the sign map is well-defined, but assuming that, this gives the first homology of Sn.

The second homology (concretely, the Schur multiplier) is:

 

This was computed in (Schur 1911), and corresponds to the double cover of the symmetric group, 2 · Sn.

Note that the exceptional low-dimensional homology of the alternating group (  corresponding to non-trivial abelianization, and   due to the exceptional 3-fold cover) does not change the homology of the symmetric group; the alternating group phenomena do yield symmetric group phenomena – the map   extends to   and the triple covers of A6 and A7 extend to triple covers of S6 and S7 – but these are not homological – the map   does not change the abelianization of S4, and the triple covers do not correspond to homology either.

The homology "stabilizes" in the sense of stable homotopy theory: there is an inclusion map Sn → Sn+1, and for fixed k, the induced map on homology Hk(Sn) → Hk(Sn+1) is an isomorphism for sufficiently high n. This is analogous to the homology of families Lie groups stabilizing.

The homology of the infinite symmetric group is computed in (Nakaoka 1961), with the cohomology algebra forming a Hopf algebra.

Representation theory

The representation theory of the symmetric group is a particular case of the representation theory of finite groups, for which a concrete and detailed theory can be obtained. This has a large area of potential applications, from symmetric function theory to problems of quantum mechanics for a number of identical particles.

The symmetric group Sn has order n!. Its conjugacy classes are labeled by partitions of n. Therefore, according to the representation theory of a finite group, the number of inequivalent irreducible representations, over the complex numbers, is equal to the number of partitions of n. Unlike the general situation for finite groups, there is in fact a natural way to parametrize irreducible representation by the same set that parametrizes conjugacy classes, namely by partitions of n or equivalently Young diagrams of size n.

Each such irreducible representation can be realized over the integers (every permutation acting by a matrix with integer coefficients); it can be explicitly constructed by computing the Young symmetrizers acting on a space generated by the Young tableaux of shape given by the Young diagram.

Over other fields the situation can become much more complicated. If the field K has characteristic equal to zero or greater than n then by Maschke's theorem the group algebra KSn is semisimple. In these cases the irreducible representations defined over the integers give the complete set of irreducible representations (after reduction modulo the characteristic if necessary).

However, the irreducible representations of the symmetric group are not known in arbitrary characteristic. In this context it is more usual to use the language of modules rather than representations. The representation obtained from an irreducible representation defined over the integers by reducing modulo the characteristic will not in general be irreducible. The modules so constructed are called Specht modules, and every irreducible does arise inside some such module. There are now fewer irreducibles, and although they can be classified they are very poorly understood. For example, even their dimensions are not known in general.

The determination of the irreducible modules for the symmetric group over an arbitrary field is widely regarded as one of the most important open problems in representation theory.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Jacobson 2009, p. 31
  2. ^ Jacobson 2009, p. 32 Theorem 1.1
  3. ^ "Symmetric Group is not Abelian/Proof 1".
  4. ^ Vasishtha, A.R.; Vasishtha, A.K. (2008). "2. Groups S3 Group Definition". Modern Algebra. Krishna Prakashan Media. p. 49. ISBN 9788182830561.
  5. ^ Neubüser, J. (1967). Die Untergruppenverbände der Gruppen der Ordnungen ̤100 mit Ausnahme der Ordnungen 64 und 96 (PhD). Universität Kiel.
  6. ^ Sagan, Bruce E. (2001), The Symmetric Group (2 ed.), Springer, p. 4, ISBN 978-0-387-95067-9
  7. ^ Björner, Anders; Brenti, Francesco (2005), Combinatorics of Coxeter groups, Springer, p. 4. Example 1.2.3, ISBN 978-3-540-27596-1
  8. ^ Artin, Michael (1991), Algebra, Pearson, Exercise 6.6.16, ISBN 978-0-13-004763-2
  9. ^ Vitali, G. (1915). "Sostituzioni sopra una infinità numerabile di elementi". Bollettino Mathesis. 7: 29–31.
  10. ^ §141, p.124 in Onofri, L. (1929). "Teoria delle sostituzioni che operano su una infinità numerabile di elementi". Annali di Matematica. 7 (1): 103–130. doi:10.1007/BF02409971. S2CID 186219904.
  11. ^ Schreier, J.; Ulam, S. (1933). "Über die Permutationsgruppe der natürlichen Zahlenfolge" (PDF). Studia Math. 4 (1): 134–141. doi:10.4064/sm-4-1-134-141.

References

External links

symmetric, group, confused, with, symmetry, group, abstract, algebra, symmetric, group, defined, over, group, whose, elements, bijections, from, itself, whose, group, operation, composition, functions, particular, finite, symmetric, group, displaystyle, mathrm. Not to be confused with Symmetry group In abstract algebra the symmetric group defined over any set is the group whose elements are all the bijections from the set to itself and whose group operation is the composition of functions In particular the finite symmetric group S n displaystyle mathrm S n defined over a finite set of n displaystyle n symbols consists of the permutations that can be performed on the n displaystyle n symbols 1 Since there are n displaystyle n n displaystyle n factorial such permutation operations the order number of elements of the symmetric group S n displaystyle mathrm S n is n displaystyle n A Cayley graph of the symmetric group S4 Cayley table with header omitted of the symmetric group S3 The elements are represented as matrices To the left of the matrices are their two line form The black arrows indicate disjoint cycles and correspond to cycle notation Green circle is an odd permutation white is an even permutation and black is the identity These are the positions of the six matricesSome matrices are not arranged symmetrically to the main diagonal thus the symmetric group is not abelian Although symmetric groups can be defined on infinite sets this article focuses on the finite symmetric groups their applications their elements their conjugacy classes a finite presentation their subgroups their automorphism groups and their representation theory For the remainder of this article symmetric group will mean a symmetric group on a finite set The symmetric group is important to diverse areas of mathematics such as Galois theory invariant theory the representation theory of Lie groups and combinatorics Cayley s theorem states that every group G displaystyle G is isomorphic to a subgroup of the symmetric group on the underlying set of G displaystyle G Contents 1 Definition and first properties 2 Applications 3 Group properties and special elements 3 1 Multiplication 3 2 Verification of group axioms 3 3 Transpositions sign and the alternating group 3 4 Cycles 3 5 Special elements 4 Conjugacy classes 5 Low degree groups 5 1 Maps between symmetric groups 6 Relation with alternating group 7 Generators and relations 8 Subgroup structure 8 1 Normal subgroups 8 2 Maximal subgroups 8 3 Sylow subgroups 8 4 Transitive subgroups 8 5 Cayley s theorem 9 Cyclic subgroups 10 Automorphism group 11 Homology 12 Representation theory 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksDefinition and first properties EditThe symmetric group on a finite set X displaystyle X is the group whose elements are all bijective functions from X displaystyle X to X displaystyle X and whose group operation is that of function composition 1 For finite sets permutations and bijective functions refer to the same operation namely rearrangement The symmetric group of degree n displaystyle n is the symmetric group on the set X 1 2 n displaystyle X 1 2 ldots n The symmetric group on a set X displaystyle X is denoted in various ways including S X displaystyle mathrm S X S X displaystyle mathfrak S X S X displaystyle Sigma X X displaystyle X and Sym X displaystyle operatorname Sym X 1 If X displaystyle X is the set 1 2 n displaystyle 1 2 ldots n then the name may be abbreviated to S n displaystyle mathrm S n S n displaystyle mathfrak S n S n displaystyle Sigma n or Sym n displaystyle operatorname Sym n 1 Symmetric groups on infinite sets behave quite differently from symmetric groups on finite sets and are discussed in Scott 1987 Ch 11 Dixon amp Mortimer 1996 Ch 8 and Cameron 1999 The symmetric group on a set of n displaystyle n elements has order n displaystyle n the factorial of n displaystyle n 2 It is abelian if and only if n displaystyle n is less than or equal to 2 3 For n 0 displaystyle n 0 and n 1 displaystyle n 1 the empty set and the singleton set the symmetric groups are trivial they have order 0 1 1 displaystyle 0 1 1 The group Sn is solvable if and only if n 4 displaystyle n leq 4 This is an essential part of the proof of the Abel Ruffini theorem that shows that for every n gt 4 displaystyle n gt 4 there are polynomials of degree n displaystyle n which are not solvable by radicals that is the solutions cannot be expressed by performing a finite number of operations of addition subtraction multiplication division and root extraction on the polynomial s coefficients Applications EditThe symmetric group on a set of size n is the Galois group of the general polynomial of degree n and plays an important role in Galois theory In invariant theory the symmetric group acts on the variables of a multi variate function and the functions left invariant are the so called symmetric functions In the representation theory of Lie groups the representation theory of the symmetric group plays a fundamental role through the ideas of Schur functors In the theory of Coxeter groups the symmetric group is the Coxeter group of type An and occurs as the Weyl group of the general linear group In combinatorics the symmetric groups their elements permutations and their representations provide a rich source of problems involving Young tableaux plactic monoids and the Bruhat order Subgroups of symmetric groups are called permutation groups and are widely studied because of their importance in understanding group actions homogeneous spaces and automorphism groups of graphs such as the Higman Sims group and the Higman Sims graph Group properties and special elements EditThe elements of the symmetric group on a set X are the permutations of X Multiplication Edit The group operation in a symmetric group is function composition denoted by the symbol or simply by just a composition of the permutations The composition f g of permutations f and g pronounced f of g maps any element x of X to f g x Concretely let see permutation for an explanation of notation f 1 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 3 2 1 5 4 displaystyle f 1 3 4 5 begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp 3 amp 4 amp 5 3 amp 2 amp 1 amp 5 amp 4 end pmatrix g 1 2 5 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 2 5 4 3 1 displaystyle g 1 2 5 3 4 begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp 3 amp 4 amp 5 2 amp 5 amp 4 amp 3 amp 1 end pmatrix Applying f after g maps 1 first to 2 and then 2 to itself 2 to 5 and then to 4 3 to 4 and then to 5 and so on So composing f and g gives f g f g 1 2 4 3 5 1 2 3 4 5 2 4 5 1 3 displaystyle fg f circ g 1 2 4 3 5 begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp 3 amp 4 amp 5 2 amp 4 amp 5 amp 1 amp 3 end pmatrix A cycle of length L k m taken to the kth power will decompose into k cycles of length m For example k 2 m 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 1 3 5 2 4 6 displaystyle 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 1 3 5 2 4 6 Verification of group axioms Edit To check that the symmetric group on a set X is indeed a group it is necessary to verify the group axioms of closure associativity identity and inverses 4 The operation of function composition is closed in the set of permutations of the given set X Function composition is always associative The trivial bijection that assigns each element of X to itself serves as an identity for the group Every bijection has an inverse function that undoes its action and thus each element of a symmetric group does have an inverse which is a permutation too Transpositions sign and the alternating group Edit Main article Transposition mathematics A transposition is a permutation which exchanges two elements and keeps all others fixed for example 1 3 is a transposition Every permutation can be written as a product of transpositions for instance the permutation g from above can be written as g 1 2 2 5 3 4 Since g can be written as a product of an odd number of transpositions it is then called an odd permutation whereas f is an even permutation The representation of a permutation as a product of transpositions is not unique however the number of transpositions needed to represent a given permutation is either always even or always odd There are several short proofs of the invariance of this parity of a permutation The product of two even permutations is even the product of two odd permutations is even and all other products are odd Thus we can define the sign of a permutation sgn f 1 if f is even 1 if f is odd displaystyle operatorname sgn f begin cases 1 amp text if f mbox is even 1 amp text if f text is odd end cases With this definition sgn S n 1 1 displaystyle operatorname sgn colon mathrm S n rightarrow 1 1 is a group homomorphism 1 1 is a group under multiplication where 1 is e the neutral element The kernel of this homomorphism that is the set of all even permutations is called the alternating group An It is a normal subgroup of Sn and for n 2 it has n 2 elements The group Sn is the semidirect product of An and any subgroup generated by a single transposition Furthermore every permutation can be written as a product of adjacent transpositions that is transpositions of the form a a 1 For instance the permutation g from above can also be written as g 4 5 3 4 4 5 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 The sorting algorithm bubble sort is an application of this fact The representation of a permutation as a product of adjacent transpositions is also not unique Cycles Edit A cycle of length k is a permutation f for which there exists an element x in 1 n such that x f x f2 x fk x x are the only elements moved by f it is required that k 2 since with k 1 the element x itself would not be moved either The permutation h defined by h 1 2 3 4 5 4 2 1 3 5 displaystyle h begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp 3 amp 4 amp 5 4 amp 2 amp 1 amp 3 amp 5 end pmatrix is a cycle of length three since h 1 4 h 4 3 and h 3 1 leaving 2 and 5 untouched We denote such a cycle by 1 4 3 but it could equally well be written 4 3 1 or 3 1 4 by starting at a different point The order of a cycle is equal to its length Cycles of length two are transpositions Two cycles are disjoint if they have disjoint subsets of elements Disjoint cycles commute for example in S6 there is the equality 4 1 3 2 5 6 2 5 6 4 1 3 Every element of Sn can be written as a product of disjoint cycles this representation is unique up to the order of the factors and the freedom present in representing each individual cycle by choosing its starting point Cycles admit the following conjugation property with any permutation s displaystyle sigma this property is often used to obtain its generators and relations s a b c s 1 s a s b s c displaystyle sigma begin pmatrix a amp b amp c amp ldots end pmatrix sigma 1 begin pmatrix sigma a amp sigma b amp sigma c amp ldots end pmatrix Special elements Edit Certain elements of the symmetric group of 1 2 n are of particular interest these can be generalized to the symmetric group of any finite totally ordered set but not to that of an unordered set The order reversing permutation is the one given by 1 2 n n n 1 1 displaystyle begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp cdots amp n n amp n 1 amp cdots amp 1 end pmatrix This is the unique maximal element with respect to the Bruhat order and the longest element in the symmetric group with respect to generating set consisting of the adjacent transpositions i i 1 1 i n 1 This is an involution and consists of n 2 displaystyle lfloor n 2 rfloor non adjacent transpositions 1 n 2 n 1 or k 1 n 1 k n n 1 2 adjacent transpositions displaystyle 1 n 2 n 1 cdots text or sum k 1 n 1 k frac n n 1 2 text adjacent transpositions n n 1 n 1 n 2 2 1 n 1 n 2 n 2 n 3 displaystyle n n 1 n 1 n 2 cdots 2 1 n 1 n 2 n 2 n 3 cdots dd so it thus has sign s g n r n 1 n 2 1 n n 1 2 1 n 0 1 mod 4 1 n 2 3 mod 4 displaystyle mathrm sgn rho n 1 lfloor n 2 rfloor 1 n n 1 2 begin cases 1 amp n equiv 0 1 pmod 4 1 amp n equiv 2 3 pmod 4 end cases which is 4 periodic in n In S2n the perfect shuffle is the permutation that splits the set into 2 piles and interleaves them Its sign is also 1 n 2 displaystyle 1 lfloor n 2 rfloor Note that the reverse on n elements and perfect shuffle on 2n elements have the same sign these are important to the classification of Clifford algebras which are 8 periodic Conjugacy classes EditThe conjugacy classes of Sn correspond to the cycle types of permutations that is two elements of Sn are conjugate in Sn if and only if they consist of the same number of disjoint cycles of the same lengths For instance in S5 1 2 3 4 5 and 1 4 3 2 5 are conjugate 1 2 3 4 5 and 1 2 4 5 are not A conjugating element of Sn can be constructed in two line notation by placing the cycle notations of the two conjugate permutations on top of one another Continuing the previous example k 1 2 3 4 5 1 4 3 2 5 displaystyle k begin pmatrix 1 amp 2 amp 3 amp 4 amp 5 1 amp 4 amp 3 amp 2 amp 5 end pmatrix which can be written as the product of cycles as 2 4 This permutation then relates 1 2 3 4 5 and 1 4 3 2 5 via conjugation that is 2 4 1 2 3 4 5 2 4 1 4 3 2 5 displaystyle 2 4 circ 1 2 3 4 5 circ 2 4 1 4 3 2 5 It is clear that such a permutation is not unique Conjugacy classes of S n displaystyle S n correspond to integer partitions of n displaystyle n to the partition m m 1 m 2 m k displaystyle mu mu 1 mu 2 dots mu k with n i 1 k m i displaystyle n sum i 1 k mu i and m 1 m 2 m k displaystyle mu 1 geq mu 2 geq cdots geq mu k is associated the set C m displaystyle C mu of permutations with cycles of lengths m 1 m 2 m k displaystyle mu 1 mu 2 dots mu k Then C m displaystyle C mu is a conjugacy class of S n displaystyle S n whose elements are said to be of cycle type m displaystyle mu Low degree groups EditSee also Representation theory of the symmetric group Special cases The low degree symmetric groups have simpler and exceptional structure and often must be treated separately S0 and S1 The symmetric groups on the empty set and the singleton set are trivial which corresponds to 0 1 1 In this case the alternating group agrees with the symmetric group rather than being an index 2 subgroup and the sign map is trivial In the case of S0 its only member is the empty function S2 This group consists of exactly two elements the identity and the permutation swapping the two points It is a cyclic group and is thus abelian In Galois theory this corresponds to the fact that the quadratic formula gives a direct solution to the general quadratic polynomial after extracting only a single root In invariant theory the representation theory of the symmetric group on two points is quite simple and is seen as writing a function of two variables as a sum of its symmetric and anti symmetric parts Setting fs x y f x y f y x and fa x y f x y f y x one gets that 2 f fs fa This process is known as symmetrization S3 S3 is the first nonabelian symmetric group This group is isomorphic to the dihedral group of order 6 the group of reflection and rotation symmetries of an equilateral triangle since these symmetries permute the three vertices of the triangle Cycles of length two correspond to reflections and cycles of length three are rotations In Galois theory the sign map from S3 to S2 corresponds to the resolving quadratic for a cubic polynomial as discovered by Gerolamo Cardano while the A3 kernel corresponds to the use of the discrete Fourier transform of order 3 in the solution in the form of Lagrange resolvents citation needed S4 The group S4 is isomorphic to the group of proper rotations about opposite faces opposite diagonals and opposite edges 9 8 and 6 permutations of the cube 5 Beyond the group A4 S4 has a Klein four group V as a proper normal subgroup namely the even transpositions 1 1 2 3 4 1 3 2 4 1 4 2 3 with quotient S3 In Galois theory this map corresponds to the resolving cubic to a quartic polynomial which allows the quartic to be solved by radicals as established by Lodovico Ferrari The Klein group can be understood in terms of the Lagrange resolvents of the quartic The map from S4 to S3 also yields a 2 dimensional irreducible representation which is an irreducible representation of a symmetric group of degree n of dimension below n 1 which only occurs for n 4 S5 S5 is the first non solvable symmetric group Along with the special linear group SL 2 5 and the icosahedral group A5 S2 S5 is one of the three non solvable groups of order 120 up to isomorphism S5 is the Galois group of the general quintic equation and the fact that S5 is not a solvable group translates into the non existence of a general formula to solve quintic polynomials by radicals There is an exotic inclusion map S5 S6 as a transitive subgroup the obvious inclusion map Sn Sn 1 fixes a point and thus is not transitive This yields the outer automorphism of S6 discussed below and corresponds to the resolvent sextic of a quintic S6 Unlike all other symmetric groups S6 has an outer automorphism Using the language of Galois theory this can also be understood in terms of Lagrange resolvents The resolvent of a quintic is of degree 6 this corresponds to an exotic inclusion map S5 S6 as a transitive subgroup the obvious inclusion map Sn Sn 1 fixes a point and thus is not transitive and while this map does not make the general quintic solvable it yields the exotic outer automorphism of S6 see Automorphisms of the symmetric and alternating groups for details Note that while A6 and A7 have an exceptional Schur multiplier a triple cover and that these extend to triple covers of S6 and S7 these do not correspond to exceptional Schur multipliers of the symmetric group Maps between symmetric groups Edit Other than the trivial map Sn C1 S0 S1 and the sign map Sn S2 the most notable homomorphisms between symmetric groups in order of relative dimension are S4 S3 corresponding to the exceptional normal subgroup V lt A4 lt S4 S6 S6 or rather a class of such maps up to inner automorphism corresponding to the outer automorphism of S6 S5 S6 as a transitive subgroup yielding the outer automorphism of S6 as discussed above There are also a host of other homomorphisms Sm Sn where m lt n Relation with alternating group EditFor n 5 the alternating group An is simple and the induced quotient is the sign map An Sn S2 which is split by taking a transposition of two elements Thus Sn is the semidirect product An S2 and has no other proper normal subgroups as they would intersect An in either the identity and thus themselves be the identity or a 2 element group which is not normal or in An and thus themselves be An or Sn Sn acts on its subgroup An by conjugation and for n 6 Sn is the full automorphism group of An Aut An Sn Conjugation by even elements are inner automorphisms of An while the outer automorphism of An of order 2 corresponds to conjugation by an odd element For n 6 there is an exceptional outer automorphism of An so Sn is not the full automorphism group of An Conversely for n 6 Sn has no outer automorphisms and for n 2 it has no center so for n 2 6 it is a complete group as discussed in automorphism group below For n 5 Sn is an almost simple group as it lies between the simple group An and its group of automorphisms Sn can be embedded into An 2 by appending the transposition n 1 n 2 to all odd permutations while embedding into An 1 is impossible for n gt 1 Generators and relations EditThe symmetric group on n letters is generated by the adjacent transpositions s i i i 1 displaystyle sigma i i i 1 that swap i and i 1 6 The collection s 1 s n 1 displaystyle sigma 1 ldots sigma n 1 generates Sn subject to the following relations 7 s i 2 1 displaystyle sigma i 2 1 s i s j s j s i displaystyle sigma i sigma j sigma j sigma i for i j gt 1 displaystyle i j gt 1 and s i s i 1 3 1 displaystyle sigma i sigma i 1 3 1 where 1 represents the identity permutation This representation endows the symmetric group with the structure of a Coxeter group and so also a reflection group Other possible generating sets include the set of transpositions that swap 1 and i for 2 i n citation needed and a set containing any n cycle and a 2 cycle of adjacent elements in the n cycle 8 Subgroup structure EditA subgroup of a symmetric group is called a permutation group Normal subgroups Edit The normal subgroups of the finite symmetric groups are well understood If n 2 Sn has at most 2 elements and so has no nontrivial proper subgroups The alternating group of degree n is always a normal subgroup a proper one for n 2 and nontrivial for n 3 for n 3 it is in fact the only nontrivial proper normal subgroup of Sn except when n 4 where there is one additional such normal subgroup which is isomorphic to the Klein four group The symmetric group on an infinite set does not have a subgroup of index 2 as Vitali 1915 9 proved that each permutation can be written as a product of three squares However it contains the normal subgroup S of permutations that fix all but finitely many elements which is generated by transpositions Those elements of S that are products of an even number of transpositions form a subgroup of index 2 in S called the alternating subgroup A Since A is even a characteristic subgroup of S it is also a normal subgroup of the full symmetric group of the infinite set The groups A and S are the only nontrivial proper normal subgroups of the symmetric group on a countably infinite set This was first proved by Onofri 1929 10 and independently Schreier Ulam 1934 11 For more details see Scott 1987 Ch 11 3 or Dixon amp Mortimer 1996 Ch 8 1 Maximal subgroups Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2009 The maximal subgroups of Sn fall into three classes the intransitive the imprimitive and the primitive The intransitive maximal subgroups are exactly those of the form Sk Sn k for 1 k lt n 2 The imprimitive maximal subgroups are exactly those of the form Sk wr Sn k where 2 k n 2 is a proper divisor of n and wr denotes the wreath product The primitive maximal subgroups are more difficult to identify but with the assistance of the O Nan Scott theorem and the classification of finite simple groups Liebeck Praeger amp Saxl 1988 gave a fairly satisfactory description of the maximal subgroups of this type according to Dixon amp Mortimer 1996 p 268 Sylow subgroups Edit The Sylow subgroups of the symmetric groups are important examples of p groups They are more easily described in special cases first The Sylow p subgroups of the symmetric group of degree p are just the cyclic subgroups generated by p cycles There are p 1 p 1 p 2 such subgroups simply by counting generators The normalizer therefore has order p p 1 and is known as a Frobenius group Fp p 1 especially for p 5 and is the affine general linear group AGL 1 p The Sylow p subgroups of the symmetric group of degree p2 are the wreath product of two cyclic groups of order p For instance when p 3 a Sylow 3 subgroup of Sym 9 is generated by a 1 4 7 2 5 8 3 6 9 and the elements x 1 2 3 y 4 5 6 z 7 8 9 and every element of the Sylow 3 subgroup has the form aixjykzl for 0 i j k l 2 displaystyle 0 leq i j k l leq 2 The Sylow p subgroups of the symmetric group of degree pn are sometimes denoted Wp n and using this notation one has that Wp n 1 is the wreath product of Wp n and Wp 1 In general the Sylow p subgroups of the symmetric group of degree n are a direct product of ai copies of Wp i where 0 ai p 1 and n a0 p a1 pk ak the base p expansion of n For instance W2 1 C2 and W2 2 D8 the dihedral group of order 8 and so a Sylow 2 subgroup of the symmetric group of degree 7 is generated by 1 3 2 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 and is isomorphic to D8 C2 These calculations are attributed to Kaloujnine 1948 and described in more detail in Rotman 1995 p 176 Note however that Kerber 1971 p 26 attributes the result to an 1844 work of Cauchy and mentions that it is even covered in textbook form in Netto 1882 39 40 Transitive subgroups Edit A transitive subgroup of Sn is a subgroup whose action on 1 2 n is transitive For example the Galois group of a finite Galois extension is a transitive subgroup of Sn for some n Cayley s theorem Edit Cayley s theorem states that every group G is isomorphic to a subgroup of some symmetric group In particular one may take a subgroup of the symmetric group on the elements of G since every group acts on itself faithfully by left or right multiplication Cyclic subgroups EditCyclic groups are those that are generated by a single permutation When a permutation is represented in cycle notation the order of the cyclic subgroup that it generates is the least common multiple of the lengths of its cycles For example in S5 one cyclic subgroup of order 5 is generated by 13254 whereas the largest cyclic subgroups of S5 are generated by elements like 123 45 that have one cycle of length 3 and another cycle of length 2 This rules out many groups as possible subgroups of symmetric groups of a given size citation needed For example S5 has no subgroup of order 15 a divisor of the order of S5 because the only group of order 15 is the cyclic group The largest possible order of a cyclic subgroup equivalently the largest possible order of an element in Sn is given by Landau s function Automorphism group EditFurther information Automorphisms of the symmetric and alternating groups n Aut Sn Out Sn Z Sn n 2 6 Sn C1 C1n 2 C1 C1 S2n 6 S6 C2 C2 C1For n 2 6 Sn is a complete group its center and outer automorphism group are both trivial For n 2 the automorphism group is trivial but S2 is not trivial it is isomorphic to C2 which is abelian and hence the center is the whole group For n 6 it has an outer automorphism of order 2 Out S6 C2 and the automorphism group is a semidirect product Aut S6 S6 C2 In fact for any set X of cardinality other than 6 every automorphism of the symmetric group on X is inner a result first due to Schreier amp Ulam 1936 according to Dixon amp Mortimer 1996 p 259 Homology EditSee also Alternating group Group homology The group homology of Sn is quite regular and stabilizes the first homology concretely the abelianization is H 1 S n Z 0 n lt 2 Z 2 n 2 displaystyle H 1 mathrm S n mathbf Z begin cases 0 amp n lt 2 mathbf Z 2 amp n geq 2 end cases The first homology group is the abelianization and corresponds to the sign map Sn S2 which is the abelianization for n 2 for n lt 2 the symmetric group is trivial This homology is easily computed as follows Sn is generated by involutions 2 cycles which have order 2 so the only non trivial maps Sn Cp are to S2 and all involutions are conjugate hence map to the same element in the abelianization since conjugation is trivial in abelian groups Thus the only possible maps Sn S2 1 send an involution to 1 the trivial map or to 1 the sign map One must also show that the sign map is well defined but assuming that this gives the first homology of Sn The second homology concretely the Schur multiplier is H 2 S n Z 0 n lt 4 Z 2 n 4 displaystyle H 2 mathrm S n mathbf Z begin cases 0 amp n lt 4 mathbf Z 2 amp n geq 4 end cases This was computed in Schur 1911 and corresponds to the double cover of the symmetric group 2 Sn Note that the exceptional low dimensional homology of the alternating group H 1 A 3 H 1 A 4 C 3 displaystyle H 1 mathrm A 3 cong H 1 mathrm A 4 cong mathrm C 3 corresponding to non trivial abelianization and H 2 A 6 H 2 A 7 C 6 displaystyle H 2 mathrm A 6 cong H 2 mathrm A 7 cong mathrm C 6 due to the exceptional 3 fold cover does not change the homology of the symmetric group the alternating group phenomena do yield symmetric group phenomena the map A 4 C 3 displaystyle mathrm A 4 twoheadrightarrow mathrm C 3 extends to S 4 S 3 displaystyle mathrm S 4 twoheadrightarrow mathrm S 3 and the triple covers of A6 and A7 extend to triple covers of S6 and S7 but these are not homological the map S 4 S 3 displaystyle mathrm S 4 twoheadrightarrow mathrm S 3 does not change the abelianization of S4 and the triple covers do not correspond to homology either The homology stabilizes in the sense of stable homotopy theory there is an inclusion map Sn Sn 1 and for fixed k the induced map on homology Hk Sn Hk Sn 1 is an isomorphism for sufficiently high n This is analogous to the homology of families Lie groups stabilizing The homology of the infinite symmetric group is computed in Nakaoka 1961 with the cohomology algebra forming a Hopf algebra Representation theory EditMain article Representation theory of the symmetric group The representation theory of the symmetric group is a particular case of the representation theory of finite groups for which a concrete and detailed theory can be obtained This has a large area of potential applications from symmetric function theory to problems of quantum mechanics for a number of identical particles The symmetric group Sn has order n Its conjugacy classes are labeled by partitions of n Therefore according to the representation theory of a finite group the number of inequivalent irreducible representations over the complex numbers is equal to the number of partitions of n Unlike the general situation for finite groups there is in fact a natural way to parametrize irreducible representation by the same set that parametrizes conjugacy classes namely by partitions of n or equivalently Young diagrams of size n Each such irreducible representation can be realized over the integers every permutation acting by a matrix with integer coefficients it can be explicitly constructed by computing the Young symmetrizers acting on a space generated by the Young tableaux of shape given by the Young diagram Over other fields the situation can become much more complicated If the field K has characteristic equal to zero or greater than n then by Maschke s theorem the group algebra KSn is semisimple In these cases the irreducible representations defined over the integers give the complete set of irreducible representations after reduction modulo the characteristic if necessary However the irreducible representations of the symmetric group are not known in arbitrary characteristic In this context it is more usual to use the language of modules rather than representations The representation obtained from an irreducible representation defined over the integers by reducing modulo the characteristic will not in general be irreducible The modules so constructed are called Specht modules and every irreducible does arise inside some such module There are now fewer irreducibles and although they can be classified they are very poorly understood For example even their dimensions are not known in general The determination of the irreducible modules for the symmetric group over an arbitrary field is widely regarded as one of the most important open problems in representation theory See also EditBraid group History of group theory Signed symmetric group and Generalized symmetric group Symmetry in quantum mechanics Exchange symmetry or permutation symmetry Symmetric inverse semigroup Symmetric powerNotes Edit a b c d Jacobson 2009 p 31 Jacobson 2009 p 32 Theorem 1 1 Symmetric Group is not Abelian Proof 1 Vasishtha A R Vasishtha A K 2008 2 Groups S3 Group Definition Modern Algebra Krishna Prakashan Media p 49 ISBN 9788182830561 Neubuser J 1967 Die Untergruppenverbande der Gruppen der Ordnungen 100 mit Ausnahme der Ordnungen 64 und 96 PhD Universitat Kiel Sagan Bruce E 2001 The Symmetric Group 2 ed Springer p 4 ISBN 978 0 387 95067 9 Bjorner Anders Brenti Francesco 2005 Combinatorics of Coxeter groups Springer p 4 Example 1 2 3 ISBN 978 3 540 27596 1 Artin Michael 1991 Algebra Pearson Exercise 6 6 16 ISBN 978 0 13 004763 2 Vitali G 1915 Sostituzioni sopra una infinita numerabile di elementi Bollettino Mathesis 7 29 31 141 p 124 in Onofri L 1929 Teoria delle sostituzioni che operano su una infinita numerabile di elementi Annali di Matematica 7 1 103 130 doi 10 1007 BF02409971 S2CID 186219904 Schreier J Ulam S 1933 Uber die Permutationsgruppe der naturlichen Zahlenfolge PDF Studia Math 4 1 134 141 doi 10 4064 sm 4 1 134 141 References EditCameron Peter J 1999 Permutation Groups London Mathematical Society Student Texts vol 45 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65378 7 Dixon John D Mortimer Brian 1996 Permutation groups Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 163 Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 94599 6 MR 1409812 Jacobson Nathan 2009 Basic algebra vol 1 2nd ed Dover ISBN 978 0 486 47189 1 Kaloujnine Leo 1948 La structure des p groupes de Sylow des groupes symetriques finis Annales Scientifiques de l Ecole Normale Superieure Serie 3 65 239 276 doi 10 24033 asens 961 ISSN 0012 9593 MR 0028834 Kerber Adalbert 1971 Representations of permutation groups I Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 240 vol 240 Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 BFb0067943 ISBN 978 3 540 05693 5 MR 0325752 Liebeck M W Praeger C E Saxl J 1988 On the O Nan Scott theorem for finite primitive permutation groups Journal of the Australian Mathematical Society 44 3 389 396 doi 10 1017 S144678870003216X Nakaoka Minoru March 1961 Homology of the Infinite Symmetric Group Annals of Mathematics 2 73 2 229 257 doi 10 2307 1970333 JSTOR 1970333 Netto Eugen 1882 Substitutionentheorie und ihre Anwendungen auf die Algebra in German Leipzig Teubner JFM 14 0090 01 Rotman Joseph J 1995 Extensions and Cohomology PDF An Introduction to the Theory of Groups Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 148 Springer pp 154 216 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 4176 8 7 ISBN 978 1 4612 8686 8 Scott W R 1987 Group Theory Dover Publications pp 45 46 ISBN 978 0 486 65377 8 Schur Issai 1911 Uber die Darstellung der symmetrischen und der alternierenden Gruppe durch gebrochene lineare Substitutionen Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik 1911 139 155 250 doi 10 1515 crll 1911 139 155 S2CID 122809608 Schreier Jozef Ulam Stanislaw 1936 Uber die Automorphismen der Permutationsgruppe der naturlichen Zahlenfolge PDF Fundamenta Mathematicae in German 28 258 260 doi 10 4064 fm 28 1 258 260 Zbl 0016 20301External links Edit Symmetric group Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Weisstein Eric W Symmetric group MathWorld Weisstein Eric W Symmetric group graph MathWorld Marcus du Sautoy Symmetry reality s riddle video of a talk OEIS Entries dealing with the Symmetric Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symmetric group amp oldid 1132176568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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