Prüfer group

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The Prüfer 2-group. <gn: gn+12 = gn, g12 = e>
The Prüfer 2-group. <gn: gn+12 = gn, g12 = e>

In mathematics, specifically group theory, the Prüfer p-group or the p-quasicyclic group or p-group, Z(p), for a prime number p is the unique torsion group in which every element has p pth roots.

  • The Prüfer p-group may be represented as a subgroup of the circle group, U(1), as the set of pnth roots of unity as n ranges over all non-negative integers:
\mathbf{Z}(p^\infty)=\{\exp(2\pi i n/p^m) \mid n\in \mathbf{Z}^+,\,m\in \mathbf{Z}^+\}\;
  • Alternatively, the Prüfer p-group may be seen as the Sylow p-subgroup of Q/Z, consisting of those elements whose order is a power of p:
\mathbf{Z}(p^\infty) = \mathbf{Z}[1/p]/\mathbf{Z}
\mathbf{Z}(p^\infty) = \langle x_1 , x_2 , ... | p x_1 = 0, p x_2 = x_1 , p x_3 = x_2 , ...\rangle.
  • The Prüfer p-group is the unique infinite p-group which is locally cyclic (every finite set of elements generates a cyclic group).
0 \subset \mathbf{Z}/p \subset \mathbf{Z}/p^2 \subset \mathbf{Z}/p^3 \subset \cdots \subset \mathbf{Z}(p^\infty)
This sequence of inclusions expresses the Prüfer p-group as the direct limit of its finite subgroups.
  • As a \mathbf{Z}-module, the Prüfer p-group is Artinian, but not Noetherian, and likewise as a group, it is Artinian but not Noetherian.[2] It can thus be used as a counterexample against the idea that every Artinian module is Noetherian (whereas every Artinian ring is Noetherian).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ D. L. Armacost and W. L. Armacost, "On p-thetic groups", Pacific J. Math., 41, no. 2 (1972), 295–301
  2. ^ Subgroups of an abelian group are abelian, and coincide with submodules as a \mathbf{Z}-module.
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