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172 lines
6.2 KiB
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172 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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lastmod: "2022-01-01T22:20:19.0000000+00:00"
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author: patrick
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categories:
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- creative
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- mathematical_summary
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comments: true
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date: "2013-08-31T00:00:00Z"
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math: true
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aliases:
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- /wordpress/archives/379/index.html
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- /creative/mathematical_summary/slightly-silly-sylow-pseudo-sonnets/index.html
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- /slightly-silly-sylow-pseudo-sonnets/index.html
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title: Slightly silly Sylow pseudo-sonnets
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---
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This is a collection of poems which together prove the [Sylow theorems][1].
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# Notes on pronunciation
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* Pronounce \\( \vert P \vert \\) as "mod P", \\(a/b\\) or \\(\dfrac{a}{b}\\) as "a on b", and \\(=\\) as "equals".
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* \\(a^b\\) for positive integer \\(b\\) is pronounced "a to the b".
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* \\(g^{-1}\\) is pronounced "gee inverse".
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* "Sylow" is pronounced "see-lov", for the purposes of these poems.
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* \\(p\\) and \\(P\\) and \\(n_p\\) are different entities, so they're allowed to rhyme.
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# [Monorhymic][4] Motivation [^notsonnet]
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Suppose we have a finite group called \\(G\\).
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This group has size \\(m\\) times a power of \\(p\\).
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We choose \\(m\\) to have coprimality:
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the power of \\(p\\)'s the biggest we can see.
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Then One: a subgroup of that size do we
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assert exists. And Two: such subgroups be
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all conjugate. And \\(m\\)'s nought mod \\(n_p\\),
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while \\(n_p = 1 \pmod{p}\\); that's Three.
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# Theorem One
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## Little [Lemmarick][5]
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*Subtitle: "The size of the normaliser \\(N\\) of a maximal \\(p\\)-subgroup \\(P\\) has \\(N/P\\) coprime to \\(p\\)"*
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There was a \\(p\\)-subgroup of \\(G\\)
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(by Cauchy). The largest was \\(P\\).
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Let \\(N\\) normalise,
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Take \\(\dfrac{N}{P}\\)'s size,
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Suppose that it's zero mod \\(p\\).
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---
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Now \\(\dfrac{N}{P}\\) also has some
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p-subgroup (by Cauchy); take one.
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Take it un-projected,
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\\(P\\)'s most big? Corrected!
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We've found one sized \\(p \vert P \vert \\): done.
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## Introductory Interlude (to the tune of "[Jerusalem](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerusalem_%28hymn%29)")
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*Subtitle: "\\(\{P\}\\) is an orbit of size \\(1\\) under the conjugation action of \\(P\\) on the set of \\(G\\)-conjugates of \\(P\\)"*
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Let \\(X\\) be \\(P\\)'s orbit under \\(G\\)
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Acting by conjuga-ti-on.
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Mod \\(G\\) o'er \\(N\\)'s the size of \\(X\\)
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The Orbit/Stabiliser's done.
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And in its turn, \\(P\\) acts on \\(X\\)
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By conjugating, as before,
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Then \\(P\\) is certainly all alone:
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Its orbit is itself, no more.
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---
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Let \\(gPg^{-1}\\) be alone,
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\\(P\\) stabilises it, and hence
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\\(pgPg^{-1}p^{-1}\\)
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Is \\(gPg^{-1}\\) - from whence
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We conjugate by \\(g^{-1}\\):
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\\(g^{-1}Pg\\) fixes \\(P\\).
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\\(g^{-1}Pg\\) is in \\(N\\),
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so \\(\pi\\) applies. From this, we'll see:
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## [Cinquain][6] Claim [^cinquain]
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*Subtitle: "\\(\{P\}\\) is the only orbit of size \\(1\\)"*
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A claim:
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\\(\pi(g^{-1}Pg)\\) is \\({1}\\).
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Call it \\(K\\). If false, \\(p\\)
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divides \\( \vert K \vert \\),
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as \\(\pi\\)
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a hom [^hom].
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Also, \\( \vert K \vert \\)
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divides \\( \vert N/P \vert \\)
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(Lagrange). Then Lemmarick proves: \\(K\\)
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Is \\({1}\\).
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## [Trochaic Tetrameter][7] Tying Together [^rhyme]
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*Subtitle: "\\(\{P\}\\) is Sylow, since \\(G/N\\) has size coprime to \\(p\\)"*
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\\(\pi\\) has kernel \\(P\\) - but also
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\\(K\\) is \\({1}\\), so lies inside it.
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\\(P\\) contains \\(g^{-1}Pg\\);
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Both have size \\(p^a\\). So
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since they're finite, they're the same set.
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Any set alone in orbit
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must be \\(P\\). The class equation
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Tells us \\( \vert G \vert / \vert N \vert \\) is
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Just precisely \\(1 \pmod{p}\\). Then
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\\( \vert G \vert / \vert P \vert \\) is not a
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multiple of \\(p\\) because it's
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\\( \vert \dfrac{N}{P} \vert \\) multiplied by
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\\(\dfrac{ \vert G \vert }{ \vert N \vert }\\) and \\(p\\) can't
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possibly divide those two. So
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Maximal the power of \\(p\\) is:
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\\(P\\)'s a Sylow \\(p\\)-subgroup.
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# Theorem Two - Quad-[quatrain][8] [^quatrain]
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A Sylow \\(p\\)-subgroup let \\(Q\\) be:
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a subgroup, size \\(p^a\\).
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Because it's the same size as was \\(P\\),
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it acts on \\(X\\) in the same way.
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---
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Mod \\(p\\), we have \\( \vert X \vert \\) is \\(1\\) -
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the orbits of \\(Q\\) will divide it;
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Now invoke the class equation:
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an orbit, size \\(1\\), lies inside it.
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---
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We dub this one \\(gPg^{-1}\\),
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then \\(g^{-1}Qg\\)'s in \\(N\\).
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Projection works just as well in verse:
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\\(\pi(g^{-1}Qg)\\) is \\({1}\\).
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---
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The previous poem's our saviour:
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\\(g^{-1}Qg\\) is in \\(P\\).
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The Pigeonhole tells its behaviour:
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that \\(P\\) is \\(g^{-1}Qg\\).
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# Theorem Three - Hindmost [Haiku][9] [^haiku]
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\\( \vert X \vert \\): \\(1 \pmod{p}\\)
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Orbit \\(X\\) divides \\(G\\)'s size:
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We have proved the Third.
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[^notsonnet]: This is not a sonnet - it is six lines too short, and is monorhymic rather than following a more varied rhyme scheme. I started out intending it to be a sonnet, but all the rhymes for "p", "G" and so forth were irresistible. "Power" is a monosyllable.
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[^cinquain]: I use a form of reverse cinquain, with syllable count 2,8,6,4,2,2,4,6,8,2.
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[^hom]: "Hom", of course, is short for "homomorphism". Imre Leader used it all the time, so I took it to be legitimate.
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[^rhyme]: This section is unrhymed; although Shakespeare rhymes his tetrameter, Longfellow doesn't. The strong iambic nature of English makes enjambement very natural to write when you're constrained to trochees, so I have just gone with the flow.
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[^quatrain]: Quatrains have a variety of allowable rhyme schemes, but I plumped for ABAB for the sake of variety. Yes, "N" rhymes with "one". For the purposes of scansion, pronounce each line as the first line of a limerick, with an optional weak syllable at the end if necessary.
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[^haiku]: I know that a haiku should mention a season, etc - but that is a constraint I am willing to relax. Gareth pointed out that if "sum" and "size" were synonymous, then " \|X\| : 1 (mod p)/Orbit X divides G's sum/A proof of the Third" would mention the season "sum-A".
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[1]: {{< ref "2013-06-26-sylow-theorems" >}}
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[2]: http://tartarus.org/gareth/
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[3]: http://mmeblair.tumblr.com/post/61532912275/carnival-of-mathematics-102-my-summation-of-other
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[4]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monorhyme
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[5]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limerick_%28poetry%29
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[6]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinquain
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[7]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trochaic_tetrameter
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[8]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quatrain
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[9]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haiku
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