In mathematics, a simple group is a nontrivial group whose only are the trivial group and the group itself. A group that is not simple can be broken into two smaller groups, namely a nontrivial normal subgroup and the corresponding quotient group. This process can be repeated, and for one eventually arrives at uniquely determined simple groups, by the Jordan–Hölder theorem.
The complete classification of finite simple groups, completed in 2004, is a major milestone in the history of mathematics.
One may use the same kind of reasoning for any abelian group, to deduce that the only simple abelian groups are the cyclic groups of prime number order. The classification of nonabelian simple groups is far less trivial. The smallest nonabelian simple group is the alternating group of order 60, and every simple group of order 60 is isomorphic to .Rotman (1995), The second smallest nonabelian simple group is the projective special linear group PSL(2,7) of order 168, and every simple group of order 168 is isomorphic to PSL(2,7).Rotman (1995), p. 281Smith & Tabachnikova (2000),
It is much more difficult to construct finitely generated infinite simple groups. The first existence result is non-explicit; it is due to Graham Higman and consists of simple quotients of the Higman group. Explicit examples, which turn out to be finitely presented, include the infinite Thompson groups and . Finitely presented torsion-free infinite simple groups were constructed by Burger and Mozes.
Briefly, finite simple groups are classified as lying in one of 18 families, or being one of 26 exceptions:
The Schreier conjecture asserts that the group of outer automorphisms of every finite simple group is solvable. This can be proved using the classification theorem.
The next discoveries were by Camille Jordan in 1870. Jordan had found 4 families of simple matrix groups over of prime order, which are now known as the .
At about the same time, it was shown that a family of five groups, called the and first described by Émile Léonard Mathieu in 1861 and 1873, were also simple. Since these five groups were constructed by methods which did not yield infinitely many possibilities, they were called "sporadic group" by William Burnside in his 1897 textbook.
Later Jordan's results on classical groups were generalized to arbitrary finite fields by Leonard Dickson, following the classification of complex simple Lie algebras by Wilhelm Killing. Dickson also constructed exception groups of type G2 and E6 as well, but not of types F4, E7, or E8 . In the 1950s the work on groups of Lie type was continued, with Claude Chevalley giving a uniform construction of the classical groups and the groups of exceptional type in a 1955 paper. This omitted certain known groups (the projective unitary groups), which were obtained by "twisting" the Chevalley construction. The remaining groups of Lie type were produced by Steinberg, Tits, and Herzig (who produced 3 D4( q) and 2 E6( q)) and by Suzuki and Ree (the Suzuki–Ree groups).
These groups (the groups of Lie type, together with the cyclic groups, alternating groups, and the five exceptional Mathieu groups) were believed to be a complete list, but after a lull of almost a century since the work of Mathieu, in 1964 the first Janko group was discovered, and the remaining 20 sporadic groups were discovered or conjectured in 1965–1975, culminating in 1981, when Robert Griess announced that he had constructed Bernd Fischer's "Monster group". The Monster is the largest sporadic simple group having order of 808,017,424,794,512,875,886,459,904,961,710,757,005,754,368,000,000,000. The Monster has a faithful 196,883-dimensional representation in the 196,884-dimensional Griess algebra, meaning that each element of the Monster can be expressed as a 196,883 by 196,883 matrix.
Soon after the construction of the Monster in 1981, a proof, totaling more than 10,000 pages, was supplied in 1983 by Daniel Gorenstein, that claimed to successfully list all finite simple groups. This was premature, as gaps were later discovered in the classification of . The gaps were filled in 2004 by a 1300 page classification of quasithin groups and the proof is now generally accepted as complete.
Proof: If n is a prime-power, then a group of order n has a nontrivial centerSee the proof in p-group, for instance. and, therefore, is not simple. If n is not a prime power, then every Sylow subgroup is proper, and, by Sylow theorems, we know that the number of Sylow p-subgroups of a group of order n is equal to 1 modulo p and divides n. Since 1 is the only such number, the Sylow p-subgroup is unique, and therefore it is normal. Since it is a proper, non-identity subgroup, the group is not simple.
Burnside: A non-Abelian finite simple group has order divisible by at least three distinct primes. This follows from Burnside's theorem.
|
|