Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contents of Volume 2
- Introduction
- Permutability and subnormality in finite groups
- (Pro)-finite and (topologically) locally finite groups with a CC-subgroup
- Table algebras generated by elements of small degrees
- Subgroups which are a union of a given number of conjugacy classes
- Some results on finite factorized groups
- On nilpotent-like Fitting formations
- Locally finite groups with min-p for all primes p
- Quasi-permutation representations of 2-groups of class 2 with cyclic centre
- Groups acting on bordered Klein surfaces with maximal symmetry
- Breaking points in subgroup lattices
- Group actions on graphs, maps and surfaces with maximum symmetry
- On dual pronormal subgroups and Fitting classes
- (p, q, r)-generations of the sporadic group O'N
- Computations with almost-crystallographic groups
- Random walks on groups: characters and geometry
- On distances of 2-groups and 3-groups
- Zeta functions of groups: the quest for order versus the flight from ennui
- Some factorizations involving hypercentrally embedded subgroups in finite soluble groups
- Elementary theory of groups
- Andrews-Curtis and Todd-Coxeter proof words
- Short balanced presentations of perfect groups
- Finite p-extensions of free pro-p groups
- Elements and groups of finite length
- Logged rewriting and identities among relators
- A characterization of F4(q) where q is an odd prime power
- On associated groups of rings
Permutability and subnormality in finite groups
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contents of Volume 2
- Introduction
- Permutability and subnormality in finite groups
- (Pro)-finite and (topologically) locally finite groups with a CC-subgroup
- Table algebras generated by elements of small degrees
- Subgroups which are a union of a given number of conjugacy classes
- Some results on finite factorized groups
- On nilpotent-like Fitting formations
- Locally finite groups with min-p for all primes p
- Quasi-permutation representations of 2-groups of class 2 with cyclic centre
- Groups acting on bordered Klein surfaces with maximal symmetry
- Breaking points in subgroup lattices
- Group actions on graphs, maps and surfaces with maximum symmetry
- On dual pronormal subgroups and Fitting classes
- (p, q, r)-generations of the sporadic group O'N
- Computations with almost-crystallographic groups
- Random walks on groups: characters and geometry
- On distances of 2-groups and 3-groups
- Zeta functions of groups: the quest for order versus the flight from ennui
- Some factorizations involving hypercentrally embedded subgroups in finite soluble groups
- Elementary theory of groups
- Andrews-Curtis and Todd-Coxeter proof words
- Short balanced presentations of perfect groups
- Finite p-extensions of free pro-p groups
- Elements and groups of finite length
- Logged rewriting and identities among relators
- A characterization of F4(q) where q is an odd prime power
- On associated groups of rings
Summary
Notation and terminology
A group G is said to be a T-group if every subnormal subgroup of G is normal in G, that is, if normality is a transitive relation. These groups have been widely studied (see [10], [11], or [14]).
A subgroup H of a group G is said to be permutable (or quasinormal) in G if HK = KH for all subgroups K of G. Permutability can be considered thus as a weak form of normality. The study of groups G in which permutability is transitive, that is, H permutable in K and K permutable in G always imply that H is permutable in G, has been a successful field of research in recent years. Such groups are called PT-groups. According to a theorem of Kegel [12, Satz 1], every permutable subgroup of G is subnormal in G. Consequently, PT-groups are exactly those groups in which subnormality and permutability coincide; that is, those groups in which every subnormal subgroup permutes with every other subgroup. Therefore, every T-group is clearly a PT-group.
One could wonder what would happen if we did not require that every subnormal subgroup of a group G permutes with any other subgroup of G, but only with a certain family of its subgroups. In this direction, those groups in which every subnormal subgroup of G permutes with every Sylow p-subgroup of G for each prime p have sometimes been called T*-groups (see [3]) or also (π – q)-groups (see [1]).
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- Groups St Andrews 2001 in Oxford , pp. 1 - 5Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003