Dihedral group of order 6


In mathematics, D3 is the dihedral group of degree 3, or, in other words, the dihedral group of order 6. It is isomorphic to the symmetric group S3 of degree 3. It is also the smallest possible non-abelian group.
This page illustrates many group concepts using this group as example.

Symmetry groups

The dihedral group D3 is the symmetry group of an equilateral triangle, that is, it is the set of all transformations such as reflection, rotation, and combinations of these, that leave the shape and position of this triangle fixed. In the case of D3, every possible permutation of the triangle's vertices constitutes such a transformation, so that the group of these symmetries is isomorphic to the symmetric group S3 of all permutations of three distinct elements. This is not the case for dihedral groups of higher orders.
The dihedral group D3 is isomorphic to two other symmetry groups in three dimensions:
Consider three colored blocks, initially placed in the order RGB. The symmetric group S3 is then the group of all possible rearrangements of these blocks.
If we denote by a the action "swap the first two blocks", and by b the action "swap the last two blocks", we can write all possible permutations in terms of these two actions.
In multiplicative form, we traditionally write xy for the combined action "first do y, then do x"; so that ab is the action, i.e., "take the last block and move it to the front".
If we write e for "leave the blocks as they are", then we can write the six permutations of the set of three blocks as the following actions:
The notation in brackets is the cycle notation.
Note that the action aa has the effect, leaving the blocks as they were; so we can write.
Similarly,
so each of the above actions has an inverse.
By inspection, we can also determine associativity and closure ; note for example that
The group is non-abelian since, for example,. Since it is built up from the basic actions a and b, we say that the set generates it.
The group has presentation
where a and b are swaps and is a cyclic permutation. Note that the second presentation means that the group is a Coxeter group.

Summary of group operations

With the generators a and b, we define the additional shorthands, and, so that a, b, c, d, e, and f are all the elements of this group. We can then summarize the group operations in the form of a Cayley table:
*eabcdf
eeabcdf
aaedfbc
bbfedca
ccdfeab
ddcabfe
ffbcaed

Note that non-equal non-identity elements only commute if they are each other's inverse. Therefore the group is centerless, i.e., the center of the group consists only of the identity element.

Conjugacy classes

We can easily distinguish three kinds of permutations of the three blocks, the conjugacy classes of the group:
For example, and are both of the form ; a permutation of the letters R, G, and B changes the notation into. Therefore, if we apply, then, and then the inverse of, which is also, the resulting permutation is.
Note that conjugate group elements always have the same order, but in general two group elements that have the same order need not be conjugate.

Subgroups

From Lagrange's theorem we know that any non-trivial subgroup of a group with 6 elements must have order 2 or 3. In fact the two cyclic permutations of all three blocks, with the identity, form a subgroup of order 3, index 2, and the swaps of two blocks, each with the identity, form three subgroups of order 2, index 3. The existence of subgroups of order 2 and 3 is also a consequence of Cauchy's theorem.
The first-mentioned is the alternating group A3.
The left cosets and the right cosets of A3 coincide and consist of A3 and the set of three swaps.
The left cosets of are:
The right cosets of are:
Thus A3 is normal, and the other three non-trivial subgroups are not. The quotient group is isomorphic with C2.
, a semidirect product, where H is a subgroup of two elements: and one of the three swaps. This decomposition is also a consequence of the Schur–Zassenhaus theorem.
In terms of permutations the two group elements of are the set of even permutations and the set of odd permutations.
If the original group is that generated by a 120°-rotation of a plane about a point, and reflection with respect to a line through that point, then the quotient group has the two elements which can be described as the subsets "just rotate " and "take a mirror image".
Note that for the symmetry group of a square, an uneven permutation of vertices does not correspond to taking a mirror image, but to operations not allowed for rectangles, i.e. 90° rotation and applying a diagonal axis of reflection.

Semidirect products

is if both φ and φ are the identity.
The semidirect product is isomorphic to the dihedral group of order 6 if φ is the identity and φ is the non-trivial automorphism of C3, which inverses the elements.
Thus we get:
for all n1, n2 in C3 and h2 in C2.
More concisely,
for all n1, n2 in C3 and h1, h2 in C2.
In a Cayley table:
001020011121
00001020011121
10102000112101
20200010210111
01012111002010
11110121100020
21211101201000

Note that for the second digit we essentially have a 2×2 table, with 3×3 equal values for each of these 4 cells. For the first digit the left half of the table is the same as the right half, but the top half is different from the bottom half.
For the direct product the table is the same except that the first digits of the bottom half of the table are the same as in the top half.

Group action

Consider D3 in the geometrical way, as a symmetry group of isometries of the plane, and consider the corresponding group action on a set of 30 evenly spaced points on a circle, numbered 0 to 29, with 0 at one of the reflexion axes.
This section illustrates group action concepts for this case.
The action of G on X is called
The orbit of a point x in X is the set of elements of X to which x can be moved by the elements of G. The orbit of x is denoted by Gx:
The orbits are and The points within an orbit are "equivalent". If a symmetry group applies for a pattern, then within each orbit the color is the same.
The set of all orbits of X under the action of G is written as.
If Y is a subset of X, we write GY for the set We call the subset Y invariant under G if as the set of all elements in G that fix x:
If x is a reflection point, its stabilizer is the group of order two containing the identity and the reflection in x. In other cases the stabilizer is the trivial group.
For a fixed x in X, consider the map from G to X given by. The image of this map is the orbit of x and the coimage is the set of all left cosets of Gx. The standard quotient theorem of set theory then gives a natural bijection between and Gx. Specifically, the bijection is given by. This result is known as the orbit-stabilizer theorem. In the two cases of a small orbit, the stabilizer is non-trivial.
If two elements x and y belong to the same orbit, then their stabilizer subgroups, Gx and Gy, are isomorphic. More precisely: if y = g · x, then Gy = gGx g−1. In the example this applies e.g. for 5 and 25, both reflection points. Reflection about 25 corresponds to a rotation of 10, reflection about 5, and rotation of −10.
A result closely related to the orbit-stabilizer theorem is Burnside's lemma:
where Xg is the set of points fixed by g. I.e., the number of orbits is equal to the average number of points fixed per group element.
For the identity all 30 points are fixed, for the two rotations none, and for the three reflections two each: and Thus, the average is six, the number of orbits.

Representation theory

Up to isomorphism, this group has three irreducible complex unitary representations, which we will call , and, where the subscript indicates the dimension. By its definition as a permutation group over the set with three elements, the group has a representation on by permuting the entries of the vector, the fundamental representation. This representation is not irreducible, as it decomposes as a direct sum of and. appears as the subspace of vectors of the form and is the representation on its orthogonal complement, which are vectors of the form.
The nontrivial one-dimensional representation arises through the groups grading: The action is multiplication by the sign of the permutation of the group element. Every finite group has such a representation since it is a subgroup of a cyclic group by its regular action. Counting the square dimensions of the representations, we see these must be all of the irreducible representations.
A 2-dimensional irreducible linear representation yields a 1-dimensional projective representation, as elliptic transforms. This can be represented by matrices with entries 0 and ±1, known as the anharmonic group:
and thus descends to a representation over any field, which is always faithful/injective. Over the field with two elements, the projective line has only 3 points, and this is thus the exceptional isomorphism In characteristic 3, this embedding stabilizes the point since . Over the field with three elements, the projective line has 4 elements, and since is isomorphic to the symmetric group on 4 elements, S4, the resulting embedding equals the stabilizer of the point.