|
|
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| {{Refimprove|date=January 2007}}
| | Eusebio is the name girls use to call our family and I think the software sounds quite good when you say it. I second-hand to be unemployed but now I am a very cashier. My house is then in South Carolina additionally I don't plan changing it. It's not a common application but what I want doing is bottle top collecting and now My partner have time to have a look at on new things. I'm not high-quality at webdesign but retailers . want to check brand new website: http://[http://Www.Bbc.Co.uk/search/?q=prometeu.net prometeu.net]<br><br> |
| In [[abstract algebra]], a '''composition series''' provides a way to break up an algebraic structure, such as a [[group (mathematics)|group]] or a [[module (mathematics)|module]], into simple pieces. The need for considering composition series in the context of modules arises from the fact that many naturally occurring modules are not [[semisimple module|semisimple]], hence cannot be decomposed into a [[Direct sum of modules|direct sum]] of [[simple module]]s. A composition series of a module ''M'' is a finite increasing [[filtration (abstract algebra)|filtration]] of ''M'' by [[submodule]]s such that the successive quotients are simple and serves as a replacement of the direct sum decomposition of ''M'' into its simple constituents.
| |
|
| |
|
| A composition series may not even exist, and when it does, it need not be unique. Nevertheless, a group of results known under the general name '''Jordan-Hölder theorem''' asserts that whenever composition series exist, the ''[[isomorphism class]]es'' of simple pieces (although, perhaps, not their ''location'' in the composition series in question) and their multiplicities are uniquely determined. Composition series may thus be used to define invariants of [[finite group]]s and [[Artinian module]]s.
| | Feel free to visit my web site - [http://prometeu.net clash of clans hack tool] |
| | |
| A related but distinct concept is a [[chief series]]: a composition series is a maximal [[subnormal series|''subnormal'' series]], while a chief series is a maximal ''[[normal series]]''.
| |
| | |
| ==For groups==
| |
| If a group ''G'' has a [[normal subgroup]] ''N'', then the factor group ''G''/''N'' may be formed, and some aspects of the study of the structure of ''G'' may be broken down by studying the "smaller" groups ''G/N'' and ''N''. If ''G'' has no normal subgroup that is different from ''G'' and from the trivial group, then ''G'' is a [[simple group]]. Otherwise, the question naturally arises as to whether ''G'' can be reduced to simple "pieces", and if so, are there any unique features of the way this can be done?
| |
| | |
| More formally, a '''composition series''' of a [[group (mathematics)|group]] ''G'' is a [[subnormal series]] of finite length
| |
| :<math>1 = H_0\triangleleft H_1\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft H_n = G,</math>
| |
| with strict inclusions, such that each ''H''<sub>''i''</sub> is a [[maximal element|maximal]] strict normal subgroup of ''H''<sub>''i''+1</sub>. Equivalently, a composition series is a subnormal series such that each factor group ''H''<sub>''i''+1</sub> / ''H''<sub>''i''</sub> is [[simple group|simple]]. The factor groups are called '''composition factors'''.
| |
| | |
| A subnormal series is a composition series [[if and only if]] it is of maximal length. That is, there are no additional subgroups which can be "inserted" into a composition series. The length ''n'' of the series is called the '''composition length'''.
| |
| | |
| If a composition series exists for a group ''G'', then any subnormal series of ''G'' can be ''refined'' to a composition series, informally, by inserting subgroups into the series up to maximality. Every [[finite group]] has a composition series, but not every [[infinite group]] has one. For example, <math>\mathbb{Z}</math> has no composition series.
| |
| | |
| ===Uniqueness: Jordan–Hölder theorem===
| |
| A group may have more than one composition series. However, the '''Jordan–Hölder theorem''' (named after [[Camille Jordan]] and [[Otto Hölder]]) states that any two composition series of a given group are equivalent. That is, they have the same composition length and the same composition factors, [[up to]] [[permutation]] and [[isomorphism]]. This theorem can be proved using the [[Schreier refinement theorem]]. The Jordan–Hölder theorem is also true for [[transfinite]] ''ascending'' composition series, but not transfinite ''descending'' composition series {{Harv|Birkhoff|1934}}.
| |
| | |
| ====Example====
| |
| For a cyclic group of order ''n'', composition series correspond to ordered prime factorizations of ''n'', and in fact yields a proof of the [[fundamental theorem of arithmetic]].
| |
| | |
| For example, the cyclic group ''C''<sub>12</sub> has
| |
| :<math> C_1\triangleleft C_2\triangleleft C_6 \triangleleft C_{12}</math>,
| |
| :<math> C_1\triangleleft C_2\triangleleft C_4\triangleleft C_{12}</math>,
| |
| :<math> C_1\triangleleft C_3\triangleleft C_6 \triangleleft C_{12}</math>
| |
| as different composition series.
| |
| The sequences of composition factors obtained in the respective cases are
| |
| : <math> C_2,C_3,C_2\ </math>
| |
| : <math> C_2,C_2,C_3\ </math> and
| |
| : <math> C_3,C_2,C_2.\ </math>
| |
| | |
| ==For modules==
| |
| The definition of composition series for modules restricts all attention to submodules, ignoring all additive subgroups that are ''not'' submodules. Given a ring ''R'' and an ''R''-module ''M'', a composition series for ''M'' is a series of submodules
| |
| | |
| :<math>\{0\} = J_0 \subset \cdots \subset J_n = M</math>
| |
| | |
| where all inclusions are strict and ''J''<sub>''k''</sub> is a maximal submodule of ''J''<sub>''k+1''</sub> for each ''k''. As for groups, if ''M'' has a composition series at all, then any finite strictly increasing series of submodules of ''M'' may be refined to a composition series, and any two composition series for ''M'' are equivalent. In that case, the (simple) quotient modules ''J''<sub>''k+1''</sub>/''J''<sub>''k''</sub> are known as the '''composition factors''' of ''M,'' and the Jordan-Hölder theorem holds, ensuring that the number of occurrences of each isomorphism type of simple ''R''-module as a composition factor does not depend on the choice of composition series.
| |
| | |
| It is well known{{sfn|Isaacs|1994|loc=p.146}} that a module has a finite composition series if and only if it is both an [[Artinian module]] and a [[Noetherian module]]. If ''R'' is an [[Artinian ring]], then every finitely generated ''R''-module is Artinan and Noetherian, and thus has a finite composition series. In particular, for any field ''K'', any finite-dimensional module for a finite-dimensional algebra over ''K'' has a composition series, unique up to equivalence.
| |
| | |
| ==Generalization==
| |
| [[group with operators|Groups with a set of operators]] generalize group actions and ring actions on an group. A unified approach to both groups and modules can be followed as in {{harv|Isaacs|1994|loc=Ch. 10}}, simplifying some of the exposition. The group ''G'' is viewed as being acted upon by elements (operators) from a set ''Ω''. Attention is restricted entirely to subgroups invariant under the action of elements from ''Ω'', called ''Ω''- subgroups. Thus ''Ω''-composition series must use only ''Ω'' subgroups, and ''Ω''-composition factors need only be ''Ω''-simple. The standard results above, such as the Jordan-Hölder theorem, are established with nearly identitical proofs.
| |
| | |
| The special cases recovered include when ''Ω''=''G'' so that ''G'' is acting on itself. An important example of this is when elements of ''G'' act by conjugation, so that the set of operators consists of the [[inner automorphism]]s. A composition series under this action is exactly a [[chief series]]. Module structures are a case of ''Ω''-actions where ''Ω'' is a ring and some additional axioms are satisfied.
| |
| | |
| ==For objects in an abelian category==
| |
| A '''composition series''' of an [[object (category theory)|object]] ''A'' in an [[abelian category]] is a sequence of subobjects
| |
| :<math>A=X_0\supsetneq X_1\supsetneq \dots \supsetneq X_n=0</math> | |
| such that each [[quotient object]] ''X<sub>i</sub>'' /''X<sub>i'' + 1</sub> is [[simple object|simple]] (for {{nowrap|0 ≤ ''i'' < ''n''}}). If ''A'' has a composition series, the integer ''n'' only depends on ''A'' and is called the [[length of an object|length]] of ''A''.<ref>{{harvnb|Kashiwara|Schapira|2006|loc=exercise 8.20}}</ref>
| |
| | |
| == See also ==
| |
| * [[Krohn–Rhodes theory]], a semigroup analogue
| |
| | |
| ==Notes==
| |
| {{reflist}}
| |
| | |
| ==References==
| |
| *{{citation
| |
| |title=Transfinite subgroup series
| |
| |authorlink=Garrett Birkhoff
| |
| |last=Birkhoff
| |
| |first=Garrett
| |
| |journal=[[Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society]]
| |
| |volume=40
| |
| |issue=12
| |
| |year=1934
| |
| |pages=847–850
| |
| |url=http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.bams/1183497873
| |
| |doi=10.1090/S0002-9904-1934-05982-2
| |
| }}
| |
| *{{Citation | last1=Isaacs | first1=I. Martin | title=Algebra: A Graduate Course | publisher=Brooks/Cole | isbn=978-0-534-19002-6 | year=1994}}
| |
| *{{Citation
| |
| | last=Kashiwara
| |
| | first=Masaki
| |
| | last2=Schapira
| |
| | first2=Pierre
| |
| | title=Categories and sheaves
| |
| | year=2006
| |
| }}
| |
| | |
| [[Category:Subgroup series]]
| |
| [[Category:Module theory]]
| |
Eusebio is the name girls use to call our family and I think the software sounds quite good when you say it. I second-hand to be unemployed but now I am a very cashier. My house is then in South Carolina additionally I don't plan changing it. It's not a common application but what I want doing is bottle top collecting and now My partner have time to have a look at on new things. I'm not high-quality at webdesign but retailers . want to check brand new website: http://prometeu.net
Feel free to visit my web site - clash of clans hack tool