Focal subgroup theorem


In abstract algebra, the focal subgroup theorem describes the fusion of elements in a Sylow subgroup of a finite group. The focal subgroup theorem was introduced in and is the "first major application of the transfer" according to. The focal subgroup theorem relates the ideas of transfer and fusion such as described in. Various applications of these ideas include local criteria for p-nilpotence and various non-simplicity criteria focussing on showing that a finite group has a normal subgroup of index p.

Background

The focal subgroup theorem relates several lines of investigation in finite group theory: normal subgroups of index a power of p, the transfer homomorphism, and fusion of elements.

Subgroups

The following three normal subgroups of index a power of p are naturally defined, and arise as the smallest normal subgroups such that the quotient is p-group. Formally, they are kernels of the reflection onto the reflective subcategory of p-groups.
Firstly, as these are weaker conditions on the groups K, one obtains the containments These are further related as:
Op has the following alternative characterization as the subgroup generated by all Sylow q-subgroups of G as qp ranges over the prime divisors of the order of G distinct from p.
Op is used to define the lower p-series of G, similarly to the upper p-series described in p-core.

Transfer homomorphism

The transfer homomorphism is a homomorphism that can be defined from any group G to the abelian group H/ defined by a subgroup HG of finite index, that is < ∞. The transfer map from a finite group G into its Sylow p-subgroup has a kernel that is easy to describe:
In other words, the "obvious" homomorphism onto an abelian p-group is in fact the most general such homomorphism.

Fusion

The fusion pattern of a subgroup H in G is the equivalence relation on the elements of H where two elements h, k of H are fused if they are G-conjugate, that is, if there is some g in G such that h = kg. The normal structure of G has an effect on the fusion pattern of its Sylow p-subgroups, and conversely the fusion pattern of its Sylow p-subgroups has an effect on the normal structure of G,.

Focal subgroup

One can define, as in the focal subgroup of H with respect to G as:
This focal subgroup measures the extent to which elements of H fuse in G, while the previous definition measured certain abelian p-group homomorphic images of the group G. The content of the focal subgroup theorem is that these two definitions of focal subgroup are compatible.
shows that the focal subgroup of P in G is the intersection P∩ of the Sylow p-subgroup P of the finite group G with the derived subgroup of G. The focal subgroup is important as it is a Sylow p-subgroup of the derived subgroup. One also gets the following result:

Statement of the theorem

The focal subgroup of a finite group G with Sylow p-subgroup P is given by:
where v is the transfer homomorphism from G to P/,.

History and generalizations

This connection between transfer and fusion is credited to, where, in different language, the focal subgroup theorem was proved along with various generalizations. The requirement that G/K be abelian was dropped, so that Higman also studied Op and the nilpotent residual γ, as so called hyperfocal subgroups. Higman also did not restrict to a single prime p, but rather allowed π-groups for sets of primes π and used Philip Hall's theorem of Hall subgroups in order to prove similar results about the transfer into Hall π-subgroups; taking π = a Hall π-subgroup is a Sylow p-subgroup, and the results of Higman are as presented above.
Interest in the hyperfocal subgroups was renewed by work of in understanding the modular representation theory of certain well behaved blocks. The hyperfocal subgroup of P in G can defined as P∩γ that is, as a Sylow p-subgroup of the nilpotent residual of G. If P is a Sylow p-subgroup of the finite group G, then one gets the standard focal subgroup theorem:
and the local characterization:
This compares to the local characterization of the focal subgroup as:
Puig is interested in the generalization of this situation to fusion systems, a categorical model of the fusion pattern of a Sylow p-subgroup with respect to a finite group that also models the fusion pattern of a defect group of a p-block in modular representation theory. In fact fusion systems have found a number of surprising applications and inspirations in the area of algebraic topology known as equivariant homotopy theory. Some of the major algebraic theorems in this area only have topological proofs at the moment.

Other characterizations

Various mathematicians have presented methods to calculate the focal subgroup from smaller groups. For instance, the influential work develops the idea of a local control of fusion, and as an example application shows that:
The choice of the family C can be made in many ways, and several examples are given: one can take C to be all non-identity subgroups of P, or the smaller choice of just the intersections Q = PPg for g in G in which NP and NPg are both Sylow p-subgroups of NG. The latter choice is made in. The work of studied aspects of the transfer and fusion as well, resulting in Grün's first theorem:

Applications

The textbook presentations in,,,, all contain various applications of the focal subgroup theorem relating fusion, transfer, and a certain kind of splitting called p-nilpotence.
During the course of the Alperin–Brauer–Gorenstein theorem classifying finite simple groups with quasi-dihedral Sylow 2-subgroups, it becomes necessary to distinguish four types of groups with quasi-dihedral Sylow 2-subgroups: the 2-nilpotent groups, the Q-type groups whose focal subgroup is a generalized quaternion group of index 2, the D-type groups whose focal subgroup a dihedral group of index 2, and the QD-type groups whose focal subgroup is the entire quasi-dihedral group. In terms of fusion, the 2-nilpotent groups have 2 classes of involutions, and 2 classes of cyclic subgroups of order 4; the Q-type have 2 classes of involutions and one class of cyclic subgroup of order 4; the QD-type have one class each of involutions and cyclic subgroups of order 4. In other words, finite groups with quasi-dihedral Sylow 2-subgroups can be classified according to their focal subgroup, or equivalently, according to their fusion patterns. The explicit lists of groups with each fusion pattern are contained in.