Pro-p group

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In mathematics a pro-p group is a pro-finite group G such that for any open (hence of finite index) normal subgroup N\triangleleft G the quotient group G / N is a finite p-group.

Alternatively, one can define a pro-p group to be the inverse limit of an inverse system of finite p-groups.

The best-understood (and historically most important) class of pro-p groups is the p-adic analytic groups: groups with the structure of an analytic manifold over \mathbb{Q}_p such that group multiplication and inversion are both analytic functions. The work of Lubotzky and Mann, combined with Lazard's solution to Hilbert's fifth problem over the p-adic numbers, shows that a pro-p group is p-adic analytic if and only if it has finite rank, i.e. there exists a positive integer r such that any closed subgroup has a topological generating set with no more than r elements.


[edit] Examples

  • The canonical example is the p-adic integers, the inverse limit of the system \{\mathbb{Z}/p^n\mathbb{Z}\}_{n\to \infty}.

[edit] References


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