AoPSWiki
Do you have what it takes to be the next brilliant trader, researcher, or developer at Jane Street Capital? Find out in the Careers in Mathematics Forum.

Normalizer

From AoPSWiki

A normalizer is a part of a group.

Let A be a subset of a group G. An element b of G is said to normalize A if bAb^{-1} = A. A subset B of G is said to normalize A if all its elements normalize A. The set of all elements of G that normalize A is called the normalizer of A. It is often denoted as N_G(A), or N(A), when there is no risk of confusion. It is evidently a subgroup of G; for e \in N(A); if b,c normalize A, then (bc)A(bc)^{-1} = bcAc^{-1}b^{-1} = bAb^{-1} = A; and if bAb^{-1} = A, then A = b^{-1}Ab. Evidently, A \subseteq N(A).

When A is a subgroup of G, N(A) is the largest subgroup of G of which A is a normal subgroup.

This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.

See also

Do you have what it takes to be the next brilliant trader, researcher, or developer at Jane Street Capital? Find out in the Careers in Mathematics Forum.
© Copyright 2008 AoPS Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. • FoundationPrivacyContact Us