Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T06:16:26.346Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE NUMBER OF SET ORBITS OF PERMUTATION GROUPS AND THE GROUP ORDER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2022

MICHAEL GINTZ
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Princeton University, Fine Hall, Washington Road, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA e-mail: [email protected]
THOMAS M. KELLER
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Texas State University, 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA e-mail: [email protected]
MATTHEW KORTJE
Affiliation:
Department of Science and Mathematics, Cedarville University, 251 N Main St, Cedarville, OH 45314, USA e-mail: [email protected]
ZILI WANG
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, University of California-Berkeley, 970 Evans Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-3840, USA e-mail: [email protected]
YONG YANG*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Texas State University, 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA
*
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

If G is permutation group acting on a finite set $\Omega $ , then this action induces a natural action of G on the power set $\mathscr{P}(\Omega )$ . The number $s(G)$ of orbits in this action is an important parameter that has been used in bounding numbers of conjugacy classes in finite groups. In this context, $\inf ({\log _2 s(G)}/{\log _2 |G|})$ plays a role, but the precise value of this constant was unknown. We determine it where G runs over all permutation groups not containing any ${{\textrm {A}}}_l, l> 4$ , as a composition factor.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Australian Mathematical Publishing Association Inc.

1 Introduction

Let G be a permutation group acting on a finite set $\Omega $ of size n. Then G induces a natural action on the power set $\mathscr{P}(\Omega )$ . The orbits of this action are called set orbits and we let $s(G)$ denote the total number of set orbits in this action. This number was studied by Babai and Pyber in [Reference Babai and Pyber1]; in particular, they proved that if G is a permutation group of degree n with no composition factor isomorphic to ${ {\textrm {A}}}_k$ for $k>t$ (where $t\geq 4$ ) then $s(G)\geq 2^{c_1n/t}$ for some absolute constant $c_1>0$ . Clearly $c_1$ depends on t, but no value or bound for $c_1$ was given. As a corollary, they obtained $s(G)\geq |G|^{c_2/(t \log _2 t)}$ for a constant $c_2$ which depends only on t but was also unspecified. This latter bound plays a crucial role in finding lower bounds for the number of conjugacy classes of finite groups. The best such bounds are currently obtained via Pyber’s approach [Reference Maróti6], which relies on the bound on set orbits. It is therefore desirable to have an idea of the size of $c_2$ , or even its exact value. It turns out that with today’s computational power, it is possible to determine $c_2$ in some situations. We focus on the important case when $t=4$ , that is, avoiding any simple alternating composition factor. For $t=4$ we can restate the above bound by saying that there is an absolute positive constant $c_3$ such that for any permutation group G with no simple alternating composition factor we have $s(G)\geq |G|^{c_3}$ and the best possible value for $c_3$ is $\inf ({\log _2 s(G)}/{\log _2 |G|})$ . We determine this value and also the corresponding permutation groups that attain it. Our main result is the following theorem.

Theorem 1.1. We have

$$ \begin{align*}\inf\bigg( \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|} \bigg) = \lim_{k\to \infty} \frac{\log_2 s(M_{12}\wr M_{12} \wr \overset{k \ \mbox{terms}}{\overbrace{S_4\wr \cdots \wr S_4}})}{\log_2 |M_{12}\wr M_{12} \wr \underset{k \ \mbox{terms}}{\underbrace{S_4\wr \cdots \wr S_4}}|}=:M,\end{align*} $$

where the infimum is taken over all permutation groups G not containing any ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l, l> 4$ , as a composition factor. (Here $M_{12}$ acts naturally on $12$ elements.)

We will give a good estimate for the value M in Theorem 2.11.

While we believe that the result is nice, its proof, admittedly, is not. By its nature the proof requires some subtle, but tedious, estimates and lots of calculations, The clean end result justifies the effort.

For solvable groups, $\inf ({\log _2 s(G)}/{\log _2 |G|})$ has already been determined in [Reference Gao and Yang3] to be $\approx 0.18939$ , which is obtained by the group $G = S_4 \wr \cdots \wr S_4$ . The value of $c_1$ has also been studied. In [Reference Yang9], the ratio ${\log _2 s(G)}/{n}$ was considered for solvable G; here $G = A\Gamma (2^3) \wr S_4 \wr \cdots \wr S_4$ gave the minimum. In [Reference Yang10], the same ratio for arbitrary G with no simple alternating composition factors was determined and the group that yields the minimum is $G = M_{24} \wr M_{12} \wr S_4 \wr \cdots \wr S_4$ . Some more general situations have recently been studied in [Reference Yan and Yang8].

The main difficulty of this and the previous papers is to determine a sequence of groups that achieves the infimum. The experience gained in the previous work allows us to narrow this down to a few candidates with some thorough calculations. The other major challenge of this paper is that much tighter estimates than before are needed to eliminate candidate groups that give sequences very close to the one we ultimately prove to yield the infimum.

2 Main results

We use $H\wr S$ to denote the wreath product of H with S where H is a group and S is a permutation group.

Let G be a permutation group and $s(G)$ denote the number of set orbits of G. Following the notation in [Reference Gao and Yang3], we let $\textit {ds}(G) = {\log _2 s(G)}/{\log _2 |G|}$ .

We provide some preliminary facts about transitive groups. Let G be a transitive permutation group on a set $\Omega $ where $|\Omega | = n$ . A system of imprimitivity is a partition of $\Omega $ which is invariant under the action of G. A transitive group is primitive if the only systems of imprimitivity are $1$ -sets and $\Omega $ itself. Let $(\Omega _1, \ldots , \Omega _m)$ denote a system of imprimitivity with maximal block-size b (where $1\leq b < n, bm = n$ and $b=1$ if and only if G is primitive). Let N be the intersection of the stabilisers of the blocks. Then $G/N$ is a primitive group acting on the set of blocks $\Omega _i$ .

Let G be a transitive permutation group of degree n that is not primitive. If we have a system of imprimitivity with $m \geq 2$ blocks of size b with b maximal, then $G\lesssim K\wr P_1$ where K is a permutation group of degree $n/m$ and $P_1$ is the primitive group acting on the m blocks. We may keep doing this and, after reindexing for convenience, we have $G\lesssim H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j$ where each $P_i$ is primitive and H is a permutation group. In this case, we say that G is induced from H.

The following two results are from [Reference Babai and Pyber1].

Lemma 2.1. If $L\leq G\leq \mbox {Sym}(\Omega )$ , then $s(G)\leq s(L)\leq s(G)\cdot |G:L|$ .

Lemma 2.2. Assume that G is intransitive on $\Omega $ and has orbits $\Omega _1, \ldots , \Omega _m$ . Let $G_i$ be the restriction of G to $\Omega _i$ . Then $s(G) \geq s(G_1)\times \cdots \times s(G_m).$

Suppose the action of G on $\Omega $ is not transitive. Since the number of set orbits will increase with the number of orbits on $\Omega $ , we may assume that G has two orbits $\Omega _1$ and $\Omega _2$ . Let $G_i$ denote the restriction of G to $\Omega _i$ . Then $G\leq G_1\times G_2$ and $|G| \leq |G_1|\cdot |G_2|$ . By Lemma 2.2, $s(G) \geq s(G_1)\cdot s(G_2)$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(G) =\frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|} \geq \frac{\log_2 (s(G_1)\cdot s(G_2))}{\log_2 (|G_1|\cdot |G_2|)} & = \frac{\log_2 s(G_1) + \log_2 s(G_2)}{\log_2 |G_1| +\log_2 |G_2|} \\ & \geq \min\{\textit{ds}(G_1), \textit{ds}(G_2) \} \end{align*} $$

(since ${(a+b)}/{(c+d)} \geq \min \{{a}/{c}, {b}/{d}\}$ for positive numbers $a, b, c$ and d). Thus, in order to prove Theorem 1.1, we need only consider transitive groups.

Lemma 2.3. Let $G = H \wr P$ be a permutation group of degree $nm$ where H is a permutation group of degree n and P has degree m. Then $\textit {ds}(H) \geq \textit {ds}(G)$ .

Proof. Let $F = H\times H\times \cdots \times H$ with m terms. Note that $F \unlhd G$ and $s(F) = s(H)^m$ by Lemma 2.2. Also $s(F) \geq s(G)$ by Lemma 2.1 and $|H|^m = |F| \leq |G|$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(H) = \frac{m\log_2 s(H)}{m\log_2 |H|} = \frac{\log_2 s(H)^m}{\log_2 |H|^m} = \frac{\log_2 s(F)}{\log_2 |F|} \geq \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|} = \textit{ds}(G).\\[-42pt] \end{align*} $$

We also make use of Tables 1 and 2 in [Reference Yang10]. Table 1 provides lower bounds for the number of set orbits of a primitive group and Table 2 provides upper bounds on the orders of primitive groups not containing ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l, l>4$ , as a composition factor.

We introduce several sequences to assist with our proof. Define $\{a_k\}_{k \geq -1}$ by $a_{-1} = s(M_{12}) = 14$ and $a_{0} = s(M_{12} \wr M_{12}) = 604576714$ . Let $a_k = {a_{k - 1} + 3 \choose 4}$ for $k\geq 1$ . The value of $a_{-1}$ may be easily verified in GAP [Reference Pyber7], and we explain $a_{0}$ shortly. Define the sequence $\{b_k\}_{k \geq 0}$ by $b_0 = 0$ and $b_{k+1} = 4\cdot b_k + 1$ . The explicit formula is $b_k = {(4^k - 1)}/{3}$ , which may be easily checked by induction. Lastly, define

$$\begin{align*}c_k = \frac{\log_2(a_k)}{\log_2(95040^{13\cdot 4^k} \cdot 24^{b_k})}=\frac{\log_2(a_k)}{13\cdot 4^k \cdot \log_2 95040 + b_k\cdot \log_2 24}.\end{align*}$$

The following calculation shows that $c_k$ is decreasing:

$$ \begin{align*} c_{k+1} &= \frac{\log_2(a_{k + 1})}{\log_2(95040^{13\cdot 4^{k + 1}} \cdot 24^{b_{k + 1}})} = \frac{\log_2{a_k+3 \choose 4}}{4^{k+1}\log_295040^{13} + (4b_k + 1) \cdot \log_2 24} \\ &\leq \frac{4 \log_2 a_k}{4^{k+1}\cdot \log_2 95040^{13} + 4\cdot b_k \cdot \log_2 24 + \log_2 24} \\ &< \frac{\log_2 a_k}{4^k \cdot \log_2 95040^{13} + b_k\cdot \log_2 24} = c_k. \end{align*} $$

We may obtain using Maple that $c_1 \approx 0.129675$ , $c_2 \approx 0.128179$ , $c_3 \approx 0.127806$ and $c_4\approx 0.127712$ . Also $c_8 < 0.1276818245$ .

To calculate $s(M_{12} \wr M_{12})$ , we consider the structure of the group action of $M_{12}$ and provide a method for calculating $s(G \wr M_{12})$ in general. A partition of a positive integer n expresses n as the sum of a sequence of strictly positive integers. Let $\Pi $ denote the set of all partitions of $12$ and suppose that $\pi \in \Pi $ is a partition of $12$ . Let $B(\pi )$ denote the number of terms in the partition, say $B(\pi ) = n_1 + n_2+ \cdots + n_j$ , where $n_1$ is the number of occurrences of the largest term in the partition, $n_2$ is the number of occurrences of the second largest term and so on. Define $F(\pi ) = n_1! n_2! \cdots n_j!$ . For example, if $\pi = (4, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1)$ , then $n_1 = 1$ , $n_2 = 2$ and $n_3 = 4$ , which gives $B(\pi ) = 7$ and $F(\pi ) = 1!2!4!$ . Let $P(n,k)$ denote the number of ways to permute k objects out of n, so ${P(s(G), B(\pi ))}/{F(\pi )}$ gives the number of ways of choosing $B(\pi )$ orbits from the set orbits of G with repetitions described by $n_1, n_2, \dots , n_k$ . Finally, we define $N(\pi )$ to be the number of orbits of $M_{12}$ on all the multiset permutations (permutations with repetitions) of a set of $12$ elements with the partition $\pi $ as multiset structure. Table 3 in [Reference Yang10] provides a summary of this information. Thus we can calculate $s(G \wr M_{12})$ using

$$ \begin{align*}s(G \wr M_{12}) = \sum_{\pi \in \Pi}N(\pi) \cdot \frac{P(s(G), B(\pi))}{F(\pi)}\end{align*} $$

and Table 3 in [Reference Yang10] and verify that $a_0 = 604576714$ . The GAP code for these calculations is available at https://www.math.txstate.edu/research-conferences/summerreu/ yang_documents.html.

Lemma 2.4 [Reference Yang10, Lemma 2.3]

Let G be a transitive permutation group acting on a set $\Omega $ , where $|\Omega | = n$ . Let $(\Omega _1, \ldots , \Omega _m)$ denote a system of imprimitivity of maximal block-size b. Let N denote the normal subgroup of G stabilising each of the blocks $\Omega _i$ . Let $G_i = {\operatorname {Stab}}_G(\Omega _i)$ and $s = s(G_1)$ . Then

  1. (1) $s(G) \geq s^m / |G/N|$ ,

  2. (2) $s(G) \geq {s + m -1 \choose s - 1}$ and equality holds if $G/N \cong S_m$ .

Lemma 2.5. Let G be a permutation group that does not contain any alternating group ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l$ with $l> 4$ as a composition factor and suppose G is induced from H. If

(2.1) $$ \begin{align} \frac{\log_2(s(H))}{\log_2|H|} -\frac{\log_2(24^{\alpha})}{\log_2|H|} \geq \beta, \end{align} $$

where $\alpha = {23}/{60}$ and $0\leq \beta \leq {3}/{20}$ , then ${\log _2(s(G))}/{\log _2|G|}\geq \beta $ .

Proof. We may assume $G\lesssim H \wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j$ where each $P_i$ is primitive and deg $(P_i) = m_i$ . By (2.1), $s(H) \geq 24^{\alpha } \cdot |H|^{\beta }$ . Also $|P_1| \leq (24^{1/3})^{m_1 - 1}$ by [Reference Keller5, Corollary 1.5]. By Lemma 2.4,

$$ \begin{align*} s(H\wr P_1) \geq s(H)^{m_1} / |P_1| &\geq \frac{24^{\alpha m_1} \cdot |H|^{\beta m_1}}{24^{(m_1-1)/3}} = 24^{\alpha} \cdot |H|^{\beta \cdot m_1} \cdot (24^{{({1}/{3})} (m_1-1)})^{{3}/{20}} \\ &\geq 24^{\alpha} \cdot |H|^{\beta \cdot m_1} \cdot (24^{{({1}/{3})} (m_1-1)})^{\beta} \geq 24^{\alpha} \cdot |H|^{\beta \cdot m_1} \cdot |P_1|^{\beta}. \end{align*} $$

Thus

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(H\wr P_1)}{\log_2 |H\wr P_1|} - \frac{\log_2 24^{\alpha}}{\log_2 |H\wr P_1|} \geq \beta.\end{align*} $$

By induction,

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j)}{\log_2 |H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j|} - \frac{\log_2 24^{\alpha}}{\log_2 |H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j|} \geq \beta,\end{align*} $$

from which $\textit {ds}(G) \geq {\log _2 s(H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j)}/{\log _2 |H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j|}$ by Lemma 2.1.

Lemma 2.6 [Reference Keller5]

If H be a primitive group of degree n where H does not contain ${ {\textrm {A}}}_n$ , then:

  1. (1) $|H| < 50 \cdot n^{\sqrt {n}}$ ;

  2. (2) $|H| < 3^n$ and $|H| < 2^n$ if $n> 24$ ;

  3. (3) $|H| < 2^{0.76n}$ when $n \geq 25$ and $n \neq 32$ .

Proposition 2.7. Let G be a primitive permutation group of degree n, not containing ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l$ with $l> 4$ as a composition factor. Then $\textit {ds}(G)> c_8$ .

Proof. Let G be a primitive permutation group of degree n not containing ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l,\ \mathrm{for} l> 4$ , as a composition factor. If $n \geq 25$ and $n\neq 32$ , then $|G| \leq 2^{0.76n}$ by Lemma 2.6, so $s(G)\geq {2^n}/{|G|} \geq 2^{0.24n}$ and

$$ \begin{align*}\textit{ds}(G) = \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|} \geq \frac{\log_2 2^{0.24n}}{\log_2 2^{0.76n}} = \frac{24}{76}> 0.3157 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

If $n=32$ , then $s(G) \geq 361$ by Table 2 of [Reference Yang10]. Also $|G|< 2^{32}$ by Lemma 2.6. So

$$ \begin{align*}\textit{ds}(G) = \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|}> \frac{\log_2 361}{32\cdot \log_2 2} > 0.2654 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

If $n < 25$ , we note that $s(G) \geq n + 1$ and $|G| < 3^n$ by Lemma 2.6. For $2\leq n \leq 20$ , direct calculation shows that

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(G) = \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|}> \frac{\log_2 (n+1)}{n\log_2 3} > c_8 \end{align*} $$

for each n. For $n = 21, 22, 23$ and $24$ , we use the upper bounds for $|G|$ in Table 2 of [Reference Yang10]. In all cases, $\textit {ds}(G)> 1.66 > c_8$ .

Theorem 2.8. Let G be a transitive permutation group not containing any composition factors ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l, l> 4$ . Let G be induced from H where H is a primitive permutation group of degree n. If H is different from $M_{12}$ , then $\textit {ds}(G)> c_8$ .

Proof. By Lemma 2.5, it suffices to show that

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(H)}{\log_2 |H|}-\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 (24)}{\log_2 |H|}> c_8\end{align*} $$

for all n. Suppose $n\geq 25$ and $n\neq 32$ . Then $|H| \leq 2^{0.76n}$ and $s(H) \geq {2^n}/{|H|} \geq 2^{0.24n}$ by Lemma 2.6. Then

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(H) -\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |H|} \geq \frac{0.24n - \log_2 (24^{{23}/{60}})}{0.76n} = \frac{24}{76} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{ 0.76 \cdot 25}> 0.223 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

Suppose $n = 32$ . Then $s(H)\geq 361$ and $|H| \leq 2^{32}$ by Table 2 of [Reference Yang10] and Lemma 2.6 and so

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 361 - \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 2^{32}}> 0.21 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

For $21\leq n \leq 24$ and $n = 14, 15, 16$ and $17$ we refer to Tables 1 and 2 in [Reference Yang10] to find bounds for $s(H)$ and $|P_1|$ . Direct calculation shows that the inequality holds.

For $3\leq n \leq 13$ and $n = 18, 19$ and $20$ , we note that $s(H) \geq n + 1$ . We use the upper bounds for $|P_1|$ from [Reference Yang10] and direct calculation shows that the inequality holds in all cases excluding $M_{12}$ .

We need to consider $n= 2, 3$ and $4$ differently. We note that by Lemma 2.7, G is not primitive and so we may assume that $G\lesssim H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j$ where each $P_i$ is primitive of degree $m_1$ . Let $K = H\wr P_1$ . We show that

(⋆) $$ \begin{align} \frac{\log_2 s(K) }{\log_2 |K| } -\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |K|}> c_8. \end{align} $$

Suppose that $n = 4$ . Then $s(H) \geq 5$ and $s(K) \geq 5^{m_1} / |P_1|$ by Lemma 2.4. Also $|H| \leq 24$ . If $m_1 \geq 25$ and $m_1\neq 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2^{0.76 m_1}$ by Lemma 2.6. Then

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 ({5^{m_1}}/{2^{0.76m_1})}}{\log_2 (24^{m_1} \cdot 2^{0.76m_1})}-\frac{\frac{23}{60}\log_2 24}{25\cdot \log_2 24\cdot 2^{0.76}}> 0.279 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

If $m_1 = 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 319979520$ by [Reference Yang10]. So $s(K) \geq 5^{32}/319979520$ . We verify that () is satisfied.

For $5 \leq m_1 \leq 24$ we use the bounds for $|P_1|$ in [Reference Yang10] and the estimate $s(K) \geq 5^{m_1} / |P_1|$ and direct calculation shows that () is satisfied in all cases except when $P_1 \cong M_{12}$ . If $P_1\cong M_{12}$ , we calculate $s(S_4\wr M_{12}) = 5825$ by the method outlined above. Since $|M_{12}| = 95040$ , direct calculation shows that () is satisfied.

For $2\leq m_1 \leq 4$ , we note that $s(K) \geq {s(H) - 1 + m_1 \choose s(H) - 1} = {4 + m_1 \choose 4}$ by Lemma 2.6. If $m_1 = 4$ , then $|P_1| \leq 24$ and $s(K) \geq {8\choose 4} = 70$ . It is easy to see that () is satisfied. Similarly, direct calculation shows that () is satisfied when $m_1 = 2$ or $3$ .

If $n = 3$ , then $s(H) \geq 4$ and $s(K) \geq 4^{m_1}/ |P_1|$ by Lemma 2.4. If $m_1 \geq 25$ and $m_1 \neq 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2^{0.76m_1}$ by Lemma 2.6 and $|K| = |H|^{m_1}|P_1| \leq 6^{m_1}\cdot 2^{0.76m_1}$ since $|H| \leq 6$ . Thus, we see that

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(K) }{\log_2 |K| } -\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |K|} \geq \frac{\log_2 ({4^{m_1}}/{2^{0.76m_1}}) }{\log_2 6^{m_1}\cdot2^{0.76m_1}} -\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 6^{25}\cdot2^{0.76\cdot25}} = 0.349> c_8.\end{align*} $$

For $m_1 = 32$ and $5 \leq m_1 \leq 24$ with $P_1\not \cong M_{12}$ and $m_1 \neq 8$ , the bounds in [Reference Yang10] and $s(K) \geq 4^{m_1} / |P_1|$ show that () is satisfied. If $P_1 \cong M_{12}$ , then $s(S_3\wr M_{12}) = 862$ by the method outlined above. Direct calculation shows that () is satisfied.

For $2\leq m_1 \leq 4$ and $m_1 = 8$ , the bounds $s(K) \geq {s(H) - 1 + m_1\choose s(H) -1 } = {3 + m_1 \choose 3}$ and the bounds for $|P_1|$ in [Reference Yang10] show that () is satisfied by direct computation.

Suppose that $n = 2$ . Then $|H| = 2$ and $s(H) \geq 3$ . If $m_1 \geq 25$ and $m_1 \neq 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2^{0.76m_1}$ . Also $s(H\wr P_1) \geq 3^{m_1}/|P_1|$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*}\frac{\log_2 s(K) }{\log_2 |K| } -\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |K|} \geq \frac{\log_2 ({3^{m_1}}/{2^{0.76m_1}}) }{\log_2 2^{m_1}\cdot2^{0.76m_1}} -\frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 2^{25}\cdot2^{0.76\cdot25}} = 0.664> c_8.\end{align*} $$

For $m_1 = 32$ and $12 \leq m_1 \leq 24$ and $P_1 \not \cong M_{12}$ , we use the bound $s(K) \geq 3^{m_1} / |P_1|$ and the bounds in [Reference Yang10]. Direct calculation shows that () is satisfied. If $P_1\cong M_{12}$ , then $s(S_2\wr M_{12}) = 120$ by the method described above. We verify that () is satisfied.

For $2\leq m_1 \leq 11$ , we use $s(K) \geq {s(H) - 1 + m_1 \choose s(H) -1} = {2 + m_1 \choose 2}$ . Direct calculation shows that () is satisfied.

Therefore, $\textit {ds}(G)> c_8$ provided H is different from $M_{12}$ .

Theorem 2.9. Let G be a transitive permutation group where G does not contain any alternating group ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l$ , $l> 4$ , as a composition factor. Let $G\cong M_{12} \wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j$ where each $P_i$ is a primitive group. If $P_1$ is different from $M_{12}$ , then $\textit {ds}(G)> c_8$ .

Proof. Note that $s(M_{12}) = 14$ and $|M_{12}| = 95040$ . Let $L = M_{12} \wr P_1$ , where deg $(P_1) = m_1 \geq 2$ . By Lemma 2.4, $s(L) \geq 14^{m_1}/ |P_1|$ . Also $|L| = 95040^{m_1} \cdot |P_1|$ . By Lemma 2.5, it suffices to show that for all $m_1 \geq 2$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}\star(L) = \frac{\log_2 s(L)}{\log_2 |L|} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |L|}> c_8.\end{align*} $$

If $m_1 \geq 25$ and $m_1 \neq 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2^{0.76 m_1}$ by Lemma 2.6. Then $s(L) \geq 14^{m_1}/ 2^{0.76m_1}$ and

$$ \begin{align*}\star(L) \geq \frac{ \log_2 ({14}/{2^{0.76}})}{\log_2 (95040\cdot 2^{0.76})} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{25\cdot \log_2 (95040\cdot 2^{0.76})}> 0.172 > c_8.\end{align*} $$

If $m_1 = 32$ , then $|P_1| \leq 319979520$ and so $s(L) \geq 14^{32}/ 319979520$ . Thus we see that $\star (L)> 0.164 > c_8$ .

For $5 \leq m_1 \leq 24$ , bounds for $|P_1|$ are obtained from [Reference Yang10] and $\star (L)> c_8$ is verified by direct computation.

For the remaining computations, we use Lemma 2.4 to get a better bound:

$$ \begin{align*}s(L) \geq {s(M_{12})-1+m_1 \choose s(M_{12}) - 1} = {s(M_{12})-1+m_1 \choose 13}.\end{align*} $$

If $m_1 = 4$ , then $|P_1| \leq 24$ and $s(L) \geq {17 \choose 13} = 2380$ , so $\star (L)> 0.133 > c_8$ . If $m_1 = 3$ , then $|P_1| \leq 6$ and $s(L) \geq {16 \choose 13} = 560$ , so $\star (L)> 0.141 > c_8$ . If $m_1 = 2$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2$ and $s(L) \geq {15 \choose 13} = 105$ , so $\star (L)> 0.145 > c_8$ .

Therefore, deg $(P_1) = 12$ and $P_1\cong M_{12}$ .

Theorem 2.10. Let H be a transitive permutation group where H does not contain any alternating group ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l$ , $l> 4$ , as a composition factor. Let $H \cong M_{12} \wr M_{12} \wr \underset {t \ \mbox {terms}}{\underbrace {S_4\wr \cdots \wr S_4}}$ , where $t \ge 0$ . Then $\textit {ds}(H\wr S_4\wr S_4\wr S_4\wr S_4 \wr S_4) \leq \textit {ds}(H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j)$ where each $P_i$ is a primitive group if $\mathrm {deg}(P_1) \neq 4$ .

Proof. As calculated before, $s(M_{12} \wr M_{12}) = 604576714$ and $|M_{12} \wr M_{12}| = 95040^{13}$ . If K is an arbitrary group, $|K \wr S_4| = |K|^4 \cdot 24$ , and so one can easily verify by induction that $|H| = 95040^{13\cdot 4^t} \cdot 24^{b_t} = 95040^{13\cdot 4^t} \cdot 24^{{(4^t - 1)}/{3}}$ .

Next we need some bounds on $s(H\wr S_4\wr S_4\wr S_4\wr S_4 \wr S_4)$ and $s(H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j)$ . We handle the first group by defining the sequence $A_0 = s(H)$ , $A_1 = s(H \wr S_4)$ , $A_2 = s(H \wr S_4 \wr S_4)$ , $A_3 =s(H \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4)$ , $A_4 = s(H \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4)$ and $A_5 = s(H \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4)$ . By Lemma 2.4(2), $A_{i+1} = {A_i + 3 \choose 4}$ for $0 \leq i \leq 4$ . Hence $A_{i+1} = {(A_i+3)(A_i+2)(A_i+1)(A_i)}/{24}$ and $A_{i+1}+3 \leq {(A_i+3)^4}/{24}$ since $A_0 \geq a_0 = 604576714$ . For simplicity, we set $A_0 = A$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*}A_5 = {A_4 + 3 \choose 4} \leq \frac{(A_4+3)^4}{24} \leq \frac{({(A_3+3)^4}/{24})^4}{24} = \frac{(A_3 + 3)^{16}}{24^5} \leq \cdots \leq \frac{(A+3)^{1024}}{24^{341}}.\end{align*} $$

Also $|H \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4 \wr S_4| = |H|^{1024}\cdot 24^{341}> |H|^{1024}\cdot 2.88^{1024}$ . Consequently,

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(H\wr S_4\wr S_4 \wr S_4\wr S_4 \wr S_4) &\leq \frac{\log_2 ( {(A+3)^{1024}}/{24^{341}})}{\log_2 |H|^{1024}\cdot 24^{341}} \\ &\leq \frac{\log_2 (A+3)^{1024} - \log_2 24^{341}}{ \log_2 |H|^{1024} \cdot 2.88^{1024}} \\ &= \frac{\log_2 (A+3) }{\log_2 2.88|H|} - \frac{ 341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024 \log_2 2.88|H|}. \end{align*} $$

Next we obtain a similar bound for $s(H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j)$ . Consider $s(H\wr P_1)$ where deg $(P_1)=m_1 \neq 4$ . Note that $s(H\wr P_1) \geq A^{m_1}/ |P_1|$ by Lemma 2.4(1). From the proof of Lemma 2.5,

$$ \begin{align*}\textit{ds}(H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j) \geq \frac{\log_2 A^{m_1}/|P_1|}{\log_2 |H|^{m_1}\cdot |P_1|} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{\log_2 |H|^{m_1}\cdot |P_1|}.\end{align*} $$

Since $|P_1| < 3^{m_1}$ by Lemma 2.6, we have

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(H\wr P_1\wr \cdots \wr P_j) &> \frac{\log_2 A}{\log_2 3|H|} - \frac{\log_2 |P_1|}{m_1 \log_2 3|H|} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{m_1 \log_2 3|H|} \\ &> \frac{\log_2 A}{\log_2 3|H|} - \frac{\log_2 |P_1|}{m_1 \log_2 2|H|} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{m_1 \log_2 2|H|}. \end{align*} $$

It suffices to show that

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2 A}{\log_2 3|H|} - \frac{\log_2 |P_1|}{m_1 \log_2 2|H|} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{m_1 \log_2 2|H|} & \geq \frac{\log_2 (A+3) }{\log_2 2|H|} - \frac{ 341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024 \log_2 2|H|}. \end{align*} $$

By rearranging these terms, we can write this inequality as

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2 2|H|}{\log_2 3|H|} \cdot \log_2 A - \log_2 (A+3) &\geq \frac{\log_2 |P_1|}{m_1} + \frac{23 \cdot \log_2 24}{60 m_1} - \frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24 }{1024}. \end{align*} $$

Note that $|H| \geq 95040^{13}$ , so ${\log _2 2|H|}/{\log _2 3|H|} \geq 0.99729879$ . Further, we have $A \geq 604576714$ , so

$$ \begin{align*} & \frac{\log_2 2|H|}{\log_2 3|H|} \cdot \log_2 A - \log_2 (A+3) + \frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024} \\ &\quad \geq 0.99729879\cdot \log_2 A - \log_2(A+3) + \frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024} \geq 1.4480303828. \end{align*} $$

Thus it suffices to show that

$$ \begin{align*}\star(P_1) = \frac{\log_2 |P_1|}{m_1} + \frac{23 \log_2 24}{60 m_1} \leq 1.4480303828 = \gamma.\end{align*} $$

If $m_1 \geq 25$ , then $|P_1| \leq 2^{m_1}$ by Lemma 2.6 and $\star (P_1) \leq 1.08 < \gamma .$ Similar computations hold for $2 \leq m_1 \leq 24$ by reading off the bounds for $|P_1|$ from Table 2 of [Reference Yang10], and one obtains $\star (P_1) < \gamma $ in all cases except when $P_1 \cong M_{12}$ and $P_1 \cong \rm ASL(3,2)$ , a primitive group of degree $8$ . We now take care of these two cases.

Suppose $P_1 \cong M_{12}$ . Since $|M_{12}| = 95040 < 2.6^{12}$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(H \wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j) &\geq \frac{\log_2(A^{12}) - \log_2 95040 - \frac{23}{60}\log_2 24}{\log_2(95040|H|^{12})} \\ &> \frac{12\cdot \log_2(A) - \log_2 95040 - \frac{23}{60}\log_2 24}{12\cdot \log_2(2.6|H|)} \\ &= \frac{\log_2(A)}{\log_2(2.6|H|)} - \frac{\log_2 95040}{12 \cdot \log_2(2.6|H|)} - \frac{\frac{23}{60}\log_2 24}{12 \cdot \log_2(2.6|H|)}. \end{align*} $$

Given that $A \geq 604576714$ , it suffices to show that,

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2(A)}{\log_2(2.6|H|)} - \frac{\log_2 95040}{12\cdot \log_2(2.6|H|)} &- \frac{\frac{23}{60}\log_2 24}{12\cdot \log_2(2.6|H|)} \\ &\geq \frac{\log_2(A+3)}{\log_2 (2.88|H|)} - \frac{341\cdot \log_224}{1024\cdot \log_2(2.88|H|)}.\\[-14pt] \end{align*} $$

By rearranging these terms, we can write this inequality as

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2(2.88|H|) \cdot \log_2(A)}{\log_2(2.6|H|)} & - \log_2(A+3) + \frac{341 \cdot \log_224}{1024} \\ &\geq \frac{\log_2(2.88|H|)}{\log_2(2.6|H|)} \bigg( \frac{\log_2 95040}{12} + \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_224}{12} \bigg). \end{align*} $$

Here $|H| = 95040^{13\cdot 4^t} \cdot 24^{{(4^t - 1)}/{3}}$ , where t is the number of terms of $S_4$ in H. Define

$$ \begin{align*} h_1(t) = \frac{\log_2(2.88|H|)}{\log_2(2.6|H|)} & = \frac{\log_2 2.88 + 13\cdot4^t\cdot\log_2 95040 + ({(4^t - 1)}/{3})\log_2 24}{\log_2 2.6 + 13\cdot4^t\cdot\log_2 95040 + ({(4^t - 1)}/{3})\log_2 24}, \\ a_1(x,t) & = h_1(t) \cdot \log_2 x - \log_2 (x+3) +\frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024}, \\ s_1(t) & = h_1(t) \cdot \bigg( \frac{\log_2 95040 + \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{12} \bigg). \end{align*} $$

It suffices to show that the inequality above, now translated as $a_1(x,t)> s_1(t)$ , holds for all $x \geq A=604576714$ and $t \geq 0$ .

Clearly $h_1(t)$ is a decreasing function and $h_1(t) \to 1$ as $t \to \infty $ . The function $a_1(x,t)$ is increasing for a fixed value of $t \geq 0$ , and achieves a minimum when $t\to \infty $ and $x = 604576714$ . Thus, $a_1(x,t) \geq 1.5268$ . Since $h_1(t)$ is decreasing, $s_1(t)$ is decreasing. So $s_1(t)$ achieves its maximum value for $t=1$ and $s_1(1) < 1.5248$ . Thus, $a_1(x,t)> s_1(t)$ for all x and t.

Finally, consider $P_1 \cong \rm ASL(3,2)$ , where $|\rm ASL(3,2)| = 1344 < 2.47^8$ . Thus,

$$ \begin{align*} \textit{ds}(H\wr P_1 \wr \cdots \wr P_j) &\geq \frac{\log_2 (A^8) - \log_2 1344 - \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24 }{\log_2 (|H|^8 \cdot 1344)} \\ &> \frac{ 8\cdot \log_2 (A) - \log_2 1344 - \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24 }{ 8\cdot \log_2 (2.47\cdot |H|)} \\ &= \frac{\log_2 A}{\log_2(2.47 |H|)} - \frac{\log_2 1344}{8\cdot \log_2 (2.47 |H|)} - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{8 \cdot \log_2 (2.47 |H|)}. \end{align*} $$

It suffices to show that

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2 A}{\log_2(2.47 |H|)} - \frac{\log_2 1344}{8\cdot \log_2 (2.47 |H|)} & - \frac{\frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{8\cdot \log_2 (2.47 |H|)} \\ &\geq \frac{\log_2(A+3)}{\log_2 (2.88|H|)} - \frac{341\cdot \log_224}{1024\cdot \log_2(2.88|H|)}. \end{align*} $$

By rearranging the terms, we can write this inequality as

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{\log_2 (2.88|H|) \cdot \log_2 A}{\log_2 (2.47|H|)} & - \log_2 (A+3) + \frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024} \\[4pt] &\geq \frac{\log_2 (2.88|H|)}{\log_2 (2.47|H|)} \bigg(\frac{\log_2 (1344) + \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{8} \bigg). \end{align*} $$

As before, $|H| = 95040^{13\cdot 4^t} \cdot 24^{{(4^t - 1)}/{3}}$ , where t is the number of terms of $S_4$ in H. Define

$$ \begin{align*} h_2(t) & = \frac{\log_2 2.88 + 13\cdot4^t\cdot\log_2 95040 + ({(4^t - 1)}/{3})\log_2 24}{\log_2 2.47 + 13\cdot4^t\cdot\log_2 95040 + ({(4^t - 1)}/{3})\log_2 24}, \\[4pt] a_2(x, t) & = h_2(t) \cdot \log_2 x - \log_2 (x+3) + \frac{341 \cdot \log_2 24}{1024}, \\[4pt] s_2(t) & = h_2(t) \cdot \bigg(\frac{\log_2 (1344) + \frac{23}{60} \log_2 24}{8} \bigg). \end{align*} $$

Again, $h_2(t)$ is a decreasing function with $h_2(t) \to 1$ as $t \to \infty $ and $a_2(x,t)$ is increasing for a fixed value of t. We still have $a_2(x, t) \geq 1.526$ and $s_2(t)$ achieves its maximum value for $t = 1$ and $s_2(1) < 1.520$ . Thus, $a_2(x,t)> s_2(t)$ for all x and t.

Theorem 2.11. We have

$$ \begin{align*}\inf\bigg( \frac{\log_2 s(G)}{\log_2 |G|} \bigg) = \lim_{k\to \infty} \frac{\log_2 s(M_{12}\wr M_{12} \wr \overset{k \ \mbox{terms}}{\overbrace{S_4\wr \cdots \wr S_4}})}{\log_2 |M_{12}\wr M_{12} \wr \underset{k \ \mbox{terms}}{\underbrace{S_4\wr \cdots \wr S_4}}|} = \lim_{k\to \infty} c_k,\end{align*} $$

where the infimum is taken over all permutation groups G not containing any ${ {\textrm {A}}}_l, l> 4$ , as a composition factor.

Proof. Let G be a permutation group. Let $M = \lim _{k\to \infty } c_k$ so that $M < c_8$ . By our earlier remarks, G is transitive. By Proposition 2.7, if G is primitive, $\textit {ds}(G)> c_8 > M$ . So we assume that G is imprimitive.

By Theorem 2.8, G is induced from $M_{12}$ and, by Theorem 2.9, G is induced from ${M_{12} \wr M_{12}}$ . By Theorem 2.10, $\inf ( {\log _2 s(G)}/{\log _2 |G|} ) = \lim _{k\to \infty } c_k$ .

Remark 2.12. Again we set $M = \lim _{k \to \infty } c_k$ . By Lemma 2.5,

$$ \begin{align*}M> c_8 - \frac{\frac{23}{60}\log_2(24)}{(13\cdot4^8)\log_2(95040) + ({(4^8 - 1)}/{3})\log_2(24)} \approx 0.1276817008.\end{align*} $$

Since $c_k$ is a strictly decreasing sequence with $c_8\, {<}\, 0.1276818247$ , this gives

$$ \begin{align*}0.1276817008 < M < 0.1276818247.\end{align*} $$

This estimate will give an explicit bound for [Reference Babai and Pyber1, Corollary 1] when $t=4$ . Since [Reference Babai and Pyber1, Corollary 1] is an important ingredient in Pyber’s proof of a lower bound for the number of conjugacy classes $k(G)$ of a finite group G in terms of its order [Reference Maróti6] (which has undetermined constants in it), it is likely that our result will help to find an explicit scalar constant in this result. We note that Pyber’s result has been improved in [Reference Baumeister, Maróti and Tong-Viet2, 4]. We also note that [4, Theorem 3.1] now has an (albeit extremely small) bound thanks to the main result of [Reference Gao and Yang3] (which is generalised by our result here). In particular, the currently best lower bound for $k(G)$ in terms of $|G|$ for solvable groups, as stated in [4, Corollary 3.2], is explicit.

Acknowledgements

This research was conducted by Gintz, Kortje and Wang during the summer of 2021 under the supervision of Keller and Yang. The authors thank Texas State University for providing a great working environment and support. The authors are grateful to the referee for the valuable suggestions which greatly improved the manuscript.

Footnotes

This research was supported by NSF-REU grant DMS-1757233 and NSA grant H98230-21-1-0333. Y. Yang was also partially supported by a grant from the Simons Foundation (#499532).

References

Babai, L. and Pyber, L., ‘Permutation groups without exponentially many orbits on the power set’, J. Combin. Theory Ser. A 66 (1998), 160168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baumeister, B., Maróti, A. and Tong-Viet, H. P., ‘Finite groups have more conjugacy classes’, Forum Math. 29 (2017), 259275.Google Scholar
Gao, Y. and Yang, Y., ‘The number of set-orbits of a solvable permutation group’, J. Group Theory, to appear. doi: 10.1515/jgth-2021-0066.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, T. M., ‘Finite groups have even more conjugacy classes’, Israel J. Math. 181 (2011), 433444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maróti, A., ‘On the orders of the primitive groups’, J. Algebra 258 (2002) 631640.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pyber, L., ‘Finite groups have many conjugacy classes’, J. Lond. Math. Soc. (2) 46 (1992), 239249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
The GAP Group, GAP – Groups, Algorithms, and Programming, version 4.11.1, 2021. https://www.gap-system.org.Google Scholar
Yan, Y. and Yang, Y., ‘Permutation groups and set-orbits’, Bull. Malays. Math. Sci. Soc. 45 (2022), 177199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, Y., ‘Solvable permutation groups and orbits on power sets’, Comm. Algebra 42 (2014), 28132820.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, Y., ‘Permutation groups and orbits on the power set’, J. Algebra Appl. 19 (2020), Article no. 2150005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar