Subgroup

Written by Dylan Hendrickson last updated

A subgroup of a group is a group of the form , where . We usually say simply that is a subgroup of .

For a subset of a group to be a subgroup, it needs to satisfy all of the group axioms itself: closure, associativity, identity, and inverse. We get associativity for free because is a group. So the requirements of a subgroup are:

  1. Closure: For any in , is in .
  2. Identity: The identity of is in .
  3. Inverses: For any in , is also in .

A subgroup is called normal if it is closed under conjugation.

The subgroup relation is transitive: if is a subgroup of , and is a subgroup of , then is a subgroup of .

Examples

Any group is a subgroup of itself. The trivial_group is a subgroup of every group.

For any integer , the set of multiples of is a subgroup of the integers (under addition).

Parents: