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Homogeneous set

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Let G be a group acting on a set S. If S has only one orbit, then the operation of G on S is said to be transitive, and the G-set S is called homogeneous, or that S is a homogeneous set under G.

If G operates on a set S, then each of the orbits of S is homogenous under the induced operation of G.

Groups acting on their own cosets; structure of homogeneous sets

Let G be a group, H a subgroup of G, and N the normalizer of H. Then G operates on the left on G/H, the set of left cosets of G modulo H; evidently, G/H is a homogenous G-set. Furthermore, N operates on G/H from the right, by the operation n: gH \mapsto gHn = gnH. The operation of H is trivial, so N/H operates likewise on G/H from the right. Let \phi : (N/H)^0 \to \mathfrak{S}_{G/H} be the homomorphism of the opposite group of N/H into the group of permutations on G/H represented by this operation.

Proposition 1. The homomorphism \phi induces an isomorphism from (N/H)^0 to the group of G-automorphisms on G/H.

Proof. First, we prove that the image of \phi is a subset of the set of automorphisms on G/H. Evidently, each element of N/H is associated with a surjective endomorphism; also if xHn = xHm, it follows that Hnm^{-1} = H, whence nm^{-1} \in H; for n,m \in N, this means n \equiv m \pmod{H}. Therefore each element of N/H is associated with a unique automorphism of the G-set G/H.

Next, we show that each automorphism f of G/H has an inverse image under \phi. Evidently, the stabilizer of f(H) is the same as the stabilizer of H, which is H itself. Suppose that x is an element of G such that f(H) = xH. If k is an element of the stabilizer of xH, then x^{-1}kxH \subseteq H, whence x^{-1}kxH \subseteq H, or k \in xHx^{-1}. Since every element of xHx^{-1} stabilizes xH, it follows that xHx^{-1} is the stabilizer of xH = f(H). Therefore xHx^{-1} = H, so x\in N. \blacksquare

Let \phi : G \to \mathfrak{S}_{G/H} the homomorphism corresponding to the action of G on G/H. An element \alpha of G is in the kernel of \phi if and only if it stabilizes every left coset modulo H; since the stabilizers of these cosets are the conjugates of H (proven in the article on stabilizers), it follows that \text{Ker}(\phi) is the intersection of the conjugates of H.

If N is a normal subgroup of G that is contained in H, then for all \alpha \in G, then N = \alpha N \alpha^{-1} \subseteq \alpha H \alpha^{-1}. Therefore N \subseteq \bigcap_{\alpha \in G} \alpha H \alpha^{-1} = \text{Ker}(\phi). Since \text{Ker}(\phi) is evidently a normal subgroup of G, it is thus the largest normal subgroup of G that H contains.

Proposition 2. Let G be a group acting transitively on a set S; let a be an element of S, H the stabilizer of a, and K a subgroup of H. Then there exists a unique G-morphism f : G/K \to G/S for which f(K) = a; this mapping is surjective, and if H=K, is is an isomorphism

Proof. We first note that if f is a mapping satisfying this requirement, then for any \alpha \in G, f(\alpha K) = \alpha a; thus f is unique if it exists.

We next observe that for \alpha, \beta \in G, the relation \alpha K = \beta K implies \alpha\beta^{-1} \in H, so \alpha \beta^{-1} stabilizes a and \alpha a = \beta a. In other words, the equivalence relation \alpha \equiv \beta \pmod{H} (with left equivalence) is compatible with the equivalence relation \alpha a = \alpha b. Thus the mapping f: \alpha H \mapsto \alpha a from G/K to E is well defined. Since S is homogeneous, for each b \in S, there exists \alpha \in G such that \alpha a = b; then f(\alpha K) = b, so f is surjective.

If H=K, then \alpha = \beta \pmod{H} is equivalent to the relation \alpha a = \beta a. It then follows that f is injective, and thus an isomorphism. \blacksquare

Theorem. Let G be a group. Then every homogeneous G-set is isomorphic to a G-set of the form G/H, for some subgroup H of G. Also, if H,H' are subgroups of G, then the homogeneous G-sets G/H, G/H' are isomorphic if and only if H and H' are conjugate subgroups of G.

Proof. Suppose S is a homogeneous G-set; let H be the stabilizer of S. Then by the previous proposition, the homogeneous G-sets S and G/H are isomorphic.

Suppose now that G/H and G/H' are isomorphic left G-sets; let f: G/H \to G/H' be a G-isomorphism. Evidently, H is its own stabilizer. By transport of structure, the stabilizer of H is also the stabilizer of f(H). Let \alpha be an element of G such that f(H) = \alpha H'. But the stabilizer of \alpha H' is \alpha H' \alpha^{-1}, which is the image of H under \text{Int}(\alpha), and which is equal to H. Thus H and H' are conjugates.

Conversely, suppose that H' = \alpha H \alpha^{-1}, for some \alpha \in G. Then H' is the stabilizer of \alpha H, so by Proposition 2, the G-sets G/H and G/H' are isomorphic. \blacksquare

See also

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