A group G is polycyclic if there exists a subnormal series G = C_1 > C_2 > ... > C_n > C_{n+1} = { 1 } with cyclic factors. Such a series is called pc series of G.
Every polycyclic group is solvable and every finite solvable group is polycyclic. However, there are infinite solvable groups which are not polycyclic.
In GAP there exists a large number of methods for polycyclic groups which are based upon the polycyclic structure of these groups. These methods are usually very efficient, especially for groups which are given by a pc-presentation (see chapter 46), and can be applied to many types of groups. Hence GAP tries to use them whenever possible, for example, for permutation groups and matrix groups over finite fields that are known to be polycyclic (the only exception is the representation as finitely presented group for which the polycyclic methods cannot be used in general).
At the current state of implementations the GAP library contains methods to compute with finite polycyclic groups, while the GAP package Polycyclic by Bettina Eick and Werner Nickel allows also computations with infinite polycyclic groups which are given by a pc-presentation.
Let G be a polycyclic group with a pc series as above. A polycyclic generating sequence (pcgs for short) of G is a sequence P := (g_1, ..., g_n) of elements of G such that C_i = ⟨ C_{i+1}, g_i ⟩ for 1 ≤ i ≤ n. Note that each polycyclic group has a pcgs, but except for very small groups, a pcgs is not unique.
For each index i the subsequence of elements (g_i, ..., g_n) forms a pcgs of the subgroup C_i. In particular, these tails generate the subgroups of the pc series and hence we say that the pc series is determined by P.
Let r_i be the index of C_{i+1} in C_i which is either a finite positive number or infinity. Then r_i is the order of g_i C_{i+1} and we call the resulting list of indices the relative orders of the pcgs P.
Moreover, with respect to a given pcgs (g_1, ..., g_n) each element g of G can be represented in a unique way as a product g = g_1^{e_1} ⋅ g_2^{e_2} ⋯ g_n^{e_n} with exponents e_i ∈ {0, ..., r_i-1}, if r_i is finite, and e_i ∈ ℤ otherwise. Words of this form are called normal words or words in normal form. Then the integer vector [ e_1, ..., e_n ] is called the exponent vector of the element g. Furthermore, the smallest index k such that e_k ≠ 0 is called the depth of g and e_k is the leading exponent of g.
For many applications we have to assume that each of the relative orders r_i is either a prime or infinity. This is equivalent to saying that there are no trivial factors in the pc series and the finite factors of the pc series are maximal refined. Then we obtain that r_i is the order of g C_{i+1} for all elements g in C_i ∖ C_{i+1} and we call r_i the relative order of the element g.
Suppose a group G is given; for example, let G be a permutation or matrix group. Then we can ask GAP to compute a pcgs of this group. If G is not polycyclic, the result will be fail
.
Note that these methods can only be applied if G is not given as finitely presented group. For finitely presented groups one can try to compute a pcgs via the polycyclic quotient methods, see 47.14.
Note also that a pcgs behaves like a list.
‣ Pcgs ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
returns a pcgs for the group G. If grp is not polycyclic it returns fail
and this result is not stored as attribute value, in particular in this case the filter HasPcgs
is not set for G!
‣ IsPcgs ( obj ) | ( category ) |
The category of pcgs.
gap> G := Group((1,2,3,4),(1,2));; gap> p := Pcgs(G); Pcgs([ (3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> IsPcgs( p ); true gap> p[1]; (3,4) gap> G := Group((1,2,3,4,5),(1,2));; gap> Pcgs(G); fail
‣ CanEasilyComputePcgs ( grp ) | ( filter ) |
This filter indicates whether it is possible to compute a pcgs for grp cheaply. Clearly, grp must be polycyclic in this case. However, not for every polycyclic group there is a method to compute a pcgs at low costs. This filter is used in the method selection mainly. Note that this filter may change its value from false
to true
.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4),(1,2) ); Group([ (1,2,3,4), (1,2) ]) gap> CanEasilyComputePcgs(G); false gap> Pcgs(G); Pcgs([ (3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> CanEasilyComputePcgs(G); true
In a number of situations it might be useful to supply a pcgs to a group.
Note that the elementary operations for such a pcgs might be rather inefficient, since GAP has to use generic methods in this case. It might be helpful to supply the relative orders of the self-defined pcgs as well by SetRelativeOrder
. See also IsPrimeOrdersPcgs
(45.4-3).
‣ PcgsByPcSequence ( fam, pcs ) | ( operation ) |
‣ PcgsByPcSequenceNC ( fam, pcs ) | ( operation ) |
constructs a pcgs for the elements family fam from the elements in the list pcs. The elements must lie in the family fam. PcgsByPcSequence
and its NC
variant will always create a new pcgs which is not induced by any other pcgs (cf. InducedPcgsByPcSequence
(45.7-2)).
gap> fam := FamilyObj( (1,2) );; # the family of permutations gap> p := PcgsByPcSequence( fam, [(1,2),(1,2,3)] ); Pcgs([ (1,2), (1,2,3) ]) gap> RelativeOrders(p); [ 2, 3 ] gap> ExponentsOfPcElement( p, (1,3,2) ); [ 0, 2 ]
‣ RelativeOrders ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the list of relative orders of the pcgs pcgs.
‣ IsFiniteOrdersPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
tests whether the relative orders of pcgs are all finite.
‣ IsPrimeOrdersPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
tests whether the relative orders of pcgs are prime numbers. Many algorithms require a pcgs to have this property. The operation IsomorphismRefinedPcGroup
(46.4-8) can be of help here.
‣ PcSeries ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the subnormal series determined by pcgs.
‣ GroupOfPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
The group generated by pcgs.
‣ OneOfPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
The identity of the group generated by pcgs.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4),(1,2) );; p := Pcgs(G);; gap> RelativeOrders(p); [ 2, 3, 2, 2 ] gap> IsFiniteOrdersPcgs(p); true gap> IsPrimeOrdersPcgs(p); true gap> PcSeries(p); [ Group([ (3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]), Group([ (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]), Group([ (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]), Group([ (1,3)(2,4) ]), Group(()) ]
‣ RelativeOrderOfPcElement ( pcgs, elm ) | ( operation ) |
The relative order of elm with respect to the prime order pcgs pcgs.
‣ ExponentOfPcElement ( pcgs, elm, pos ) | ( operation ) |
returns the pos-th exponent of elm with respect to pcgs.
‣ ExponentsOfPcElement ( pcgs, elm[, posran] ) | ( operation ) |
returns the exponents of elm with respect to pcgs. The three argument version returns the exponents in the positions given in posran.
‣ DepthOfPcElement ( pcgs, elm ) | ( operation ) |
returns the depth of the element elm with respect to pcgs.
‣ LeadingExponentOfPcElement ( pcgs, elm ) | ( operation ) |
returns the leading exponent of elm with respect to pcgs.
‣ PcElementByExponents ( pcgs, list ) | ( function ) |
‣ PcElementByExponentsNC ( pcgs[, basisind], list ) | ( operation ) |
returns the element corresponding to the exponent vector list with respect to pcgs. The exponents in list must be in the range of permissible exponents for pcgs. It is not guaranteed that PcElementByExponents
will reduce the exponents modulo the relative orders. (You should use the operation LinearCombinationPcgs
(45.5-7) for this purpose.) The NC
version does not check that the lengths of the lists fit together and does not check the exponent range.
The three argument version gives exponents only w.r.t. the generators in pcgs indexed by basisind.
‣ LinearCombinationPcgs ( pcgs, list[, one] ) | ( function ) |
returns the product ∏_i pcgs[i]^{list[i]}. In contrast to PcElementByExponents
(45.5-6) this permits negative exponents. pcgs might be a list of group elements. In this case, an appropriate identity element one must be given. list can be empty.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4),(1,2) );; P := Pcgs(G);; gap> g := PcElementByExponents(P, [0,1,1,1]); (1,2,3) gap> ExponentsOfPcElement(P, g); [ 0, 1, 1, 1 ]
‣ SiftedPcElement ( pcgs, elm ) | ( operation ) |
sifts elm through pcgs, reducing it if the depth is the same as the depth of one of the generators in pcgs. Thus the identity is returned if elm lies in the group generated by pcgs. pcgs must be an induced pcgs (see section 45.7) and elm must lie in the span of the parent of pcgs.
‣ CanonicalPcElement ( ipcgs, elm ) | ( operation ) |
reduces elm at the induces pcgs ipcgs such that the exponents of the reduced result r are zero at the depths for which there are generators in ipcgs. Elements, whose quotient lies in the group generated by ipcgs yield the same canonical element.
‣ ReducedPcElement ( pcgs, x, y ) | ( operation ) |
reduces the element x by dividing off (from the left) a power of y such that the leading coefficient of the result with respect to pcgs becomes zero. The elements x and y therefore have to have the same depth.
‣ CleanedTailPcElement ( pcgs, elm, dep ) | ( operation ) |
returns an element in the span of pcgs whose exponents for indices 1 to dep-1 with respect to pcgs are the same as those of elm, the remaining exponents are undefined. This can be used to obtain more "simple" elements if only representatives in a factor are required, see 45.9.
The difference to HeadPcElementByNumber
(45.5-12) is that this function is guaranteed to zero out trailing coefficients while CleanedTailPcElement
will only do this if it can be done cheaply.
‣ HeadPcElementByNumber ( pcgs, elm, dep ) | ( operation ) |
returns an element in the span of pcgs whose exponents for indices 1 to dep-1 with respect to pcgs are the same as those of elm, the remaining exponents are zero. This can be used to obtain more "simple" elements if only representatives in a factor are required.
There are certain products of elements whose exponents are used often within algorithms, and which might be obtained more easily than by computing the product first and to obtain its exponents afterwards. The operations in this section provide a way to obtain such exponent vectors directly.
(The circumstances under which these operations give a speedup depend very much on the pcgs and the representation of elements that is used. So the following operations are not guaranteed to give a speedup in every case, however the default methods are not slower than to compute the exponents of a product and thus these operations should always be used if applicable.)
The second class are exponents of products of the generators which make up the pcgs. If the pcgs used is a family pcgs (see FamilyPcgs
(46.1-1)) then these exponents can be looked up and do not need to be computed.
‣ ExponentsConjugateLayer ( mpcgs, elm, e ) | ( operation ) |
Computes the exponents of elm^
e with respect to mpcgs; elm must be in the span of mpcgs, e a pc element in the span of the parent pcgs of mpcgs and mpcgs must be the modulo pcgs for an abelian layer. (This is the usual case when acting on a chief factor). In this case if mpcgs is induced by the family pcgs (see section 45.7), the exponents can be computed directly by looking up exponents without having to compute in the group and having to collect a potential tail.
‣ ExponentsOfRelativePower ( pcgs, i ) | ( operation ) |
For p = pcgs[i] this function returns the exponent vector with respect to pcgs of the element p^e where e is the relative order of p in pcgs. For the family pcgs or pcgs induced by it (see section 45.7), this might be faster than computing the element and computing its exponent vector.
‣ ExponentsOfConjugate ( pcgs, i, j ) | ( operation ) |
returns the exponents of pcgs[i]^pcgs[j]
with respect to pcgs. For the family pcgs or pcgs induced by it (see section 45.7), this might be faster than computing the element and computing its exponent vector.
‣ ExponentsOfCommutator ( pcgs, i, j ) | ( operation ) |
returns the exponents of the commutator Comm(
pcgs[i], pcgs[j] )
with respect to pcgs. For the family pcgs or pcgs induced by it, (see section 45.7), this might be faster than computing the element and computing its exponent vector.
Let U be a subgroup of G and let P be a pcgs of G as above such that P determines the subnormal series G = C_1 > ... > C_{n+1} = { 1 }. Then the series of subgroups U ∩ C_i is a subnormal series of U with cyclic or trivial factors. Hence, if we choose an element u_{i_j} ∈ (U ∩ C_{i_j}) ∖ (U ∩ C_{i_j+1}) whenever this factor is non-trivial, then we obtain a pcgs Q = (u_{i_1}, ..., u_{i_m}) of U. We say that Q is an induced pcgs with respect to P. The pcgs P is the parent pcgs to the induced pcgs Q.
Note that the pcgs Q is induced with respect to P if and only if the matrix of exponent vectors of the elements u_{i_j} with respect to P is in upper triangular form. Thus Q is not unique in general.
In particular, the elements of an induced pcgs do not necessarily have leading coefficient 1 relative to the inducing pcgs. The attribute LeadCoeffsIGS
(45.7-7) holds the leading coefficients in case they have to be renormed in an algorithm.
Each induced pcgs is a pcgs and hence allows all elementary operations for pcgs. On the other hand each pcgs could be transformed into an induced pcgs for the group defined by the pcgs, but note that an arbitrary pcgs is in general not an induced pcgs for technical reasons.
An induced pcgs is "compatible" with its parent, see ParentPcgs
(45.7-3).
In [LNS84] a "non-commutative Gauss" algorithm is described to compute an induced pcgs of a subgroup U from a generating set of U. For calling this in GAP, see 45.7-4 to 45.7-8.
To create a subgroup generated by an induced pcgs such that the induced pcgs gets stored automatically, use SubgroupByPcgs
(45.7-9).
‣ IsInducedPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( category ) |
The category of induced pcgs. This a subcategory of pcgs.
‣ InducedPcgsByPcSequence ( pcgs, pcs ) | ( operation ) |
‣ InducedPcgsByPcSequenceNC ( pcgs, pcs[, depths] ) | ( operation ) |
If pcs is a list of elements that form an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs this operation returns an induced pcgs with these elements.
In the third version, the depths of pcs with respect to pcgs can be given (they are computed anew otherwise).
‣ ParentPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the pcgs by which pcgs was induced. If pcgs was not induced, it simply returns pcgs.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4),(1,2) );; gap> P := Pcgs(G);; gap> K := InducedPcgsByPcSequence( P, [(1,2,3,4),(1,3)(2,4)] ); Pcgs([ (1,2,3,4), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> ParentPcgs( K ); Pcgs([ (3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> IsInducedPcgs( K ); true
‣ InducedPcgs ( pcgs, grp ) | ( operation ) |
computes a pcgs for grp which is induced by pcgs. If pcgs has a parent pcgs, then the result is induced with respect to this parent pcgs.
InducedPcgs
is a wrapper function only. Therefore, methods for computing computing an induced pcgs should be installed for the operation InducedPcgsOp
.
‣ InducedPcgsByGenerators ( pcgs, gens ) | ( operation ) |
‣ InducedPcgsByGeneratorsNC ( pcgs, gens ) | ( operation ) |
returns an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs for the subgroup generated by gens.
‣ InducedPcgsByPcSequenceAndGenerators ( pcgs, ind, gens ) | ( operation ) |
returns an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs of the subgroup generated by ind and gens. Here ind must be an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs (or a list of group elements that form such an igs) and it will be used as initial sequence for the computation.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4),(1,2) );; P := Pcgs(G);; gap> I := InducedPcgsByGenerators( P, [(1,2,3,4)] ); Pcgs([ (1,2,3,4), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> J := InducedPcgsByPcSequenceAndGenerators( P, I, [(1,2)] ); Pcgs([ (1,2,3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ])
‣ LeadCoeffsIGS ( igs ) | ( attribute ) |
This attribute is used to store leading coefficients with respect to the parent pcgs. the i-th entry –if bound– is the leading exponent of the element of igs that has depth i in the parent. (It cannot be assigned to a component in the object created by InducedPcgsByPcSequenceNC
(45.7-2) as the permutation group methods call it from within the postprocessing, before this postprocessing however no coefficients may be computed.)
‣ ExtendedPcgs ( N, gens ) | ( operation ) |
extends the pcgs N (induced w.r.t. home) to a new induced pcgs by prepending gens. No checks are performed that this really yields an induced pcgs.
‣ SubgroupByPcgs ( G, pcgs ) | ( operation ) |
returns a subgroup of G generated by the elements of pcgs.
The induced pcgs Q of U is called canonical if the matrix of exponent vectors contains normed vectors only and above each leading entry in the matrix there are 0's only. The canonical pcgs of U with respect to P is unique and hence such pcgs can be used to compare subgroups.
‣ IsCanonicalPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
An induced pcgs is canonical if the matrix of the exponent vectors of the elements of pcgs with respect to the ParentPcgs
(45.7-3) value of pcgs is in Hermite normal form (see [LNS84]). While a subgroup can have various induced pcgs with respect to a parent pcgs a canonical pcgs is unique.
‣ CanonicalPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the canonical pcgs corresponding to the induced pcgs pcgs.
gap> G := Group((1,2,3,4),(5,6,7)); Group([ (1,2,3,4), (5,6,7) ]) gap> P := Pcgs(G); Pcgs([ (5,6,7), (1,2,3,4), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> I := InducedPcgsByPcSequence(P, [(5,6,7)*(1,3)(2,4),(1,3)(2,4)] ); Pcgs([ (1,3)(2,4)(5,6,7), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> CanonicalPcgs(I); Pcgs([ (5,6,7), (1,3)(2,4) ])
Let N be a normal subgroup of G such that G/N is polycyclic with pcgs (h_1 N, ..., h_r N). Then we call the sequence of preimages (h_1, ... h_r) a modulo pcgs of G/N. G is called the numerator of the modulo pcgs and N is the denominator of the modulo pcgs.
Modulo pcgs are often used to facilitate efficient computations with factor groups, since they allow computations with factor groups without formally defining the factor group at all.
All elementary operations of pcgs, see Sections 45.4 and 45.5, apply to modulo pcgs as well. However, it is in general not possible to compute induced pcgs with respect to a modulo pcgs.
Two more elementary operations for modulo pcgs are NumeratorOfModuloPcgs
(45.9-3) and DenominatorOfModuloPcgs
(45.9-4).
‣ ModuloPcgs ( G, N ) | ( operation ) |
returns a modulo pcgs for the factor G/N which must be solvable, which N may be insolvable. ModuloPcgs
will return a pcgs for the factor, there is no guarantee that it will be "compatible" with any other pcgs. If this is required, the mod
operator must be used on induced pcgs, see \mod
(45.9-5).
‣ IsModuloPcgs ( obj ) | ( category ) |
The category of modulo pcgs. Note that each pcgs is a modulo pcgs for the trivial subgroup.
‣ NumeratorOfModuloPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns a generating set for the numerator of the modulo pcgs pcgs.
‣ DenominatorOfModuloPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns a generating set for the denominator of the modulo pcgs pcgs.
gap> G := Group( (1,2,3,4,5),(1,2) ); Group([ (1,2,3,4,5), (1,2) ]) gap> P := ModuloPcgs(G, DerivedSubgroup(G) ); Pcgs([ (4,5) ]) gap> NumeratorOfModuloPcgs(P); [ (1,2,3,4,5), (1,2) ] gap> DenominatorOfModuloPcgs(P); [ (1,3,2), (2,4,3), (2,3)(4,5) ] gap> RelativeOrders(P); [ 2 ] gap> ExponentsOfPcElement( P, (1,2,3,4,5) ); [ 0 ] gap> ExponentsOfPcElement( P, (4,5) ); [ 1 ]
45.9-5 \mod
‣ \mod ( P, I ) | ( method ) |
Modulo Pcgs can also be built from compatible induced pcgs. Let G be a group with pcgs P and let I be an induced pcgs of a normal subgroup N of G. (Respectively: P and I are both induced with respect to the same Pcgs.) Then we can compute a modulo pcgs of G mod N by
P mod
I
Note that in this case we obtain the advantage that the values of NumeratorOfModuloPcgs
(45.9-3) and DenominatorOfModuloPcgs
(45.9-4) are just P and I, respectively, and hence are unique.
The resulting modulo pcgs will consist of a subset of P and will be "compatible" with P (or its parent).
gap> G := Group((1,2,3,4));; gap> P := Pcgs(G); Pcgs([ (1,2,3,4), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> I := InducedPcgsByGenerators(P, [(1,3)(2,4)]); Pcgs([ (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> M := P mod I; [ (1,2,3,4) ] gap> NumeratorOfModuloPcgs(M); Pcgs([ (1,2,3,4), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> DenominatorOfModuloPcgs(M); Pcgs([ (1,3)(2,4) ])
‣ CorrespondingGeneratorsByModuloPcgs ( mpcgs, imgs ) | ( function ) |
Let mpcgs be a modulo pcgs for a factor of a group G and let U be a subgroup of G generated by imgs such that U covers the factor for the modulo pcgs. Then this function computes elements in U corresponding to the generators of the modulo pcgs.
Note that the computation of induced generating sets is not possible for some modulo pcgs.
‣ CanonicalPcgsByGeneratorsWithImages ( pcgs, gens, imgs ) | ( operation ) |
computes a canonical, pcgs-induced pcgs for the span of gens and simultaneously does the same transformations on imgs, preserving thus a correspondence between gens and imgs. This operation is used to represent homomorphisms from a pc group.
If substantial calculations are done in a factor it might be worth still to construct the factor group in its own representation (for example by calling PcGroupWithPcgs
(46.5-1) on a modulo pcgs.
The following functions are intended for working with factor groups obtained by factoring out the tail of a pcgs. They provide a way to map elements or induced pcgs quickly in the factor (respectively to take preimages) without the need to construct a homomorphism.
The setup is always a pcgs pcgs of G and a pcgs fpcgs of a factor group H = G/N which corresponds to a head of pcgs.
No tests for validity of the input are performed.
‣ ProjectedPcElement ( pcgs, fpcgs, elm ) | ( function ) |
returns the image in H of an element elm of G.
‣ ProjectedInducedPcgs ( pcgs, fpcgs, ipcgs ) | ( function ) |
ipcgs must be an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs. This operation returns an induced pcgs with respect to fpcgs consisting of the nontrivial images of ipcgs.
‣ LiftedPcElement ( pcgs, fpcgs, elm ) | ( function ) |
returns a preimage in G of an element elm of H.
‣ LiftedInducedPcgs ( pcgs, fpcgs, ipcgs, ker ) | ( function ) |
ipcgs must be an induced pcgs with respect to fpcgs. This operation returns an induced pcgs with respect to pcgs consisting of the preimages of ipcgs, appended by the elements in ker (assuming there is a bijection of pcgs mod ker to fpcgs). ker might be a simple element list.
By definition, a pcgs determines a pc series of its underlying group. However, in many applications it will be necessary that this pc series refines a normal series with certain properties; for example, a normal series with abelian factors.
There are functions in GAP to compute a pcgs through a normal series with elementary abelian factors, a central series or the lower p-central series. See also Section 45.13 for a more explicit possibility.
‣ IsPcgsElementaryAbelianSeries ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
returns true
if the pcgs pcgs refines an elementary abelian series. IndicesEANormalSteps
(45.11-3) then gives the indices in the Pcgs, at which the subgroups of this series start.
‣ PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
‣ PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries ( list ) | ( attribute ) |
computes a pcgs for G that refines an elementary abelian series. IndicesEANormalSteps
(45.11-3) gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the normal subgroups of this series start. The second variant returns a pcgs that runs through the normal subgroups in the list list.
‣ IndicesEANormalSteps ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries
(45.11-2)) Then IndicesEANormalSteps
returns a sorted list of integers, indicating the tails of pcgs which generate these normal subgroup of G. If i is an element of this list, (g_i, ..., g_n) is a normal subgroup of G. The list always starts with 1 and ends with n+1. (These indices form one series with elementary abelian subfactors, not necessarily the most refined one.)
The attribute EANormalSeriesByPcgs
(45.11-4) returns the actual series of subgroups.
For arbitrary pcgs not obtained as belonging to a special series such a set of indices not necessarily exists, and IndicesEANormalSteps
is not guaranteed to work in this situation.
Typically, IndicesEANormalSteps
is set by PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries
(45.11-2).
‣ EANormalSeriesByPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries
(45.11-2)). This attribute returns the actual series of normal subgroups, corresponding to IndicesEANormalSteps
(45.11-3).
‣ IsPcgsCentralSeries ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
returns true
if the pcgs pcgs refines an central elementary abelian series. IndicesCentralNormalSteps
(45.11-7) then gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the subgroups of this series start.
‣ PcgsCentralSeries ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
computes a pcgs for G that refines a central elementary abelian series. IndicesCentralNormalSteps
(45.11-7) gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the normal subgroups of this series start.
‣ IndicesCentralNormalSteps ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with central elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsCentralSeries
(45.11-6)). Then IndicesCentralNormalSteps
returns a sorted list of integers, indicating the tails of pcgs which generate these normal subgroups of G. If i is an element of this list, (g_i, ..., g_n) is a normal subgroup of G. The list always starts with 1 and ends with n+1. (These indices form one series with central elementary abelian subfactors, not necessarily the most refined one.)
The attribute CentralNormalSeriesByPcgs
(45.11-8) returns the actual series of subgroups.
For arbitrary pcgs not obtained as belonging to a special series such a set of indices not necessarily exists, and IndicesCentralNormalSteps
is not guaranteed to work in this situation.
Typically, IndicesCentralNormalSteps
is set by PcgsCentralSeries
(45.11-6).
‣ CentralNormalSeriesByPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with central elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsCentralSeries
(45.11-6)). This attribute returns the actual series of normal subgroups, corresponding to IndicesCentralNormalSteps
(45.11-7).
‣ IsPcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
returns true
if the pcgs pcgs refines a p-central elementary abelian series for a p-group. IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
(45.11-11) then gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the subgroups of this series start.
‣ PcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
computes a pcgs for the p-group G that refines a p-central elementary abelian series. IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
(45.11-11) gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the normal subgroups of this series start.
‣ IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with p-central elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup
(45.11-10)). Then IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
returns a sorted list of integers, indicating the tails of pcgs which generate these normal subgroups of G. If i is an element of this list, (g_i, ..., g_n) is a normal subgroup of G. The list always starts with 1 and ends with n+1. (These indices form one series with central elementary abelian subfactors, not necessarily the most refined one.)
The attribute PCentralNormalSeriesByPcgsPGroup
(45.11-12) returns the actual series of subgroups.
For arbitrary pcgs not obtained as belonging to a special series such a set of indices not necessarily exists, and IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
is not guaranteed to work in this situation.
Typically, IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
is set by PcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup
(45.11-10).
‣ PCentralNormalSeriesByPcgsPGroup ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a series of normal subgroups with p-central elementary abelian factors (for example from calling PcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup
(45.11-10)). This attribute returns the actual series of normal subgroups, corresponding to IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup
(45.11-11).
‣ IsPcgsChiefSeries ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
returns true
if the pcgs pcgs refines a chief series. IndicesChiefNormalSteps
(45.11-15) then gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the subgroups of this series start.
‣ PcgsChiefSeries ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
computes a pcgs for G that refines a chief series. IndicesChiefNormalSteps
(45.11-15) gives the indices in the pcgs, at which the normal subgroups of this series start.
‣ IndicesChiefNormalSteps ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a chief series for example from calling PcgsChiefSeries
(45.11-14)). Then IndicesChiefNormalSteps
returns a sorted list of integers, indicating the tails of pcgs which generate these normal subgroups of G. If i is an element of this list, (g_i, ..., g_n) is a normal subgroup of G. The list always starts with 1 and ends with n+1. (These indices form one series with elementary abelian subfactors, not necessarily the most refined one.)
The attribute ChiefNormalSeriesByPcgs
(45.11-16) returns the actual series of subgroups.
For arbitrary pcgs not obtained as belonging to a special series such a set of indices not necessarily exists, and IndicesChiefNormalSteps
is not guaranteed to work in this situation.
Typically, IndicesChiefNormalSteps
is set by PcgsChiefSeries
(45.11-14).
‣ ChiefNormalSeriesByPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
Let pcgs be a pcgs obtained as corresponding to a chief series (for example from calling PcgsChiefSeries
(45.11-14)). This attribute returns the actual series of normal subgroups, corresponding to IndicesChiefNormalSteps
(45.11-15).
gap> g:=Group((1,2,3,4),(1,2));; gap> p:=PcgsElementaryAbelianSeries(g); Pcgs([ (3,4), (2,4,3), (1,4)(2,3), (1,3)(2,4) ]) gap> IndicesEANormalSteps(p); [ 1, 2, 3, 5 ] gap> g:=Group((1,2,3,4),(1,5)(2,6)(3,7)(4,8));; gap> p:=PcgsCentralSeries(g); Pcgs([ (1,5)(2,6)(3,7)(4,8), (5,6,7,8), (5,7)(6,8), (1,4,3,2)(5,6,7,8), (1,3)(2,4)(5,7)(6,8) ]) gap> IndicesCentralNormalSteps(p); [ 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 ] gap> q:=PcgsPCentralSeriesPGroup(g); Pcgs([ (1,5)(2,6)(3,7)(4,8), (5,6,7,8), (5,7)(6,8), (1,4,3,2)(5,6,7,8), (1,3)(2,4)(5,7)(6,8) ]) gap> IndicesPCentralNormalStepsPGroup(q); [ 1, 3, 5, 6 ]
‣ IndicesNormalSteps ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the indices of all steps in the pc series, which are normal in the group defined by the pcgs.
(In general, this function yields a slower performance than the more specialized index functions for elementary abelian series etc.)
‣ NormalSeriesByPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the subgroups the pc series, which are normal in the group defined by the pcgs.
(In general, this function yields a slower performance than the more specialized index functions for elementary abelian series etc.)
‣ SumFactorizationFunctionPcgs ( parentpcgs, n, u, kerpcgs ) | ( operation ) |
computes the sum and intersection of the lists n and u whose elements form modulo pcgs induced by parentpcgs for two subgroups modulo a kernel given by kerpcgs. If kerpcgs is a tail if the parent-pcgs it is sufficient to give the starting depth, this can be more efficient than to construct an explicit pcgs. The factor group modulo kerpcgs generated by n must be elementary abelian and normal under u.
The function returns a record with components
sum
elements that form a modulo pcgs for the span of both subgroups.
intersection
elements that form a modulo pcgs for the intersection of both subgroups.
factorization
a function that returns for an element x in the span of sum
a record with components u
and n
that give its decomposition.
The record components sum
and intersection
are not pcgs but only lists of pc elements (to avoid unnecessary creation of induced pcgs).
In short, a special pcgs is a pcgs which has particularly nice properties, for example it always refines an elementary abelian series, for p-groups it even refines a central series. These nice properties permit particularly efficient algorithms.
Let G be a finite polycyclic group. A special pcgs of G is a pcgs which is closely related to a Hall system and the maximal subgroups of G. These pcgs have been introduced by C. R. Leedham-Green who also gave an algorithm to compute them. Improvements to this algorithm are due to Bettina Eick. For a more detailed account of their definition the reader is referred to [Eic97]
To introduce the definition of special pcgs we first need to define the LG-series and head complements of a finite polycyclic group G. Let G = G_1 > G_2 > ... G_m > G_{m+1} = { 1 } be the lower nilpotent series of G; that is, G_i is the smallest normal subgroup of G_{i-1} with nilpotent factor. To obtain the LG-series of G we need to refine this series. Thus consider a factor F_i := G_i / G_{i+1}. Since F_i is finite nilpotent, it is a direct product of its Sylow subgroups, say F_i = P_{i,1} ⋯ P_{i,r_i}. For each Sylow p_j-subgroup P_{i,j} we can consider its lower p_j-central series. To obtain a characteristic central series with elementary abelian factors of F_i we loop over its Sylow subgroups. Each time we consider P_{i,j} in this process we take the next step of its lower p_j-central series into the series of F_i. If there is no next step, then we just skip the consideration of P_{i,j}. Note that the second term of the lower p-central series of a p-group is in fact its Frattini subgroup. Thus the Frattini subgroup of F_i is contained in the computed series of this group. We denote the Frattini subgroup of F_i = G_i / G_{i+1} by G_i^* / G_{i+1}.
The factors G_i / G_i^* are called the heads of G, while the (possibly trivial) factors G_i^* / G_{i+1} are the tails of G. A head complement of G is a subgroup U of G such that U / G_i^* is a complement to the head G_i / G_i^* in G / G_i^* for some i.
Now we are able to define a special pcgs of G. It is a pcgs of G with three additional properties. First, the pc series determined by the pcgs refines the LG-series of G. Second, a special pcgs exhibits a Hall system of the group G; that is, for each set of primes π the elements of the pcgs with relative order in π form a pcgs of a Hall π-subgroup in a Hall system of G. Third, a special pcgs exhibits a head complement for each head of G.
To record information about the LG-series with the special pcgs we define the LGWeights of the special pcgs. These weights are a list which contains a weight w for each elements g of the special pcgs. Such a weight w represents the smallest subgroup of the LG-series containing g.
Since the LG-series is defined in terms of the lower nilpotent series, Sylow subgroups of the factors and lower p-central series of the Sylow subgroup, the weight w is a triple. More precisely, g is contained in the w[1]th term U of the lower nilpotent series of G, but not in the next smaller one V. Then w[3] is a prime such that g V is contained in the Sylow w[3]-subgroup P/V of U/V. Moreover, gV is contained in the w[2]th term of the lower p-central series of P/V.
There are two more attributes of a special pcgs containing information about the LG-series: the list LGLayers and the list LGFirst. The list of layers corresponds to the elements of the special pcgs and denotes the layer of the LG-series in which an element lies. The list LGFirst corresponds to the LG-series and gives the number of the first element in the special pcgs of the corresponding subgroup.
‣ IsSpecialPcgs ( obj ) | ( property ) |
tests whether obj is a special pcgs.
‣ SpecialPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
‣ SpecialPcgs ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
computes a special pcgs for the group defined by pcgs or for G.
‣ LGWeights ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the LGWeights of the special pcgs pcgs.
‣ LGLayers ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the layers of the special pcgs pcgs.
‣ LGFirst ( pcgs ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the first indices for each layer of the special pcgs pcgs.
‣ LGLength ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
returns the length of the LG-series of the group G, if G is solvable, and fail
otherwise.
gap> G := SmallGroup( 96, 220 ); <pc group of size 96 with 6 generators> gap> spec := SpecialPcgs( G ); Pcgs([ f1, f2, f3, f4, f5, f6 ]) gap> LGWeights(spec); [ [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 3 ], [ 1, 2, 2 ] ] gap> LGLayers(spec); [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 3 ] gap> LGFirst(spec); [ 1, 5, 6, 7 ] gap> LGLength( G ); 3 gap> p := SpecialPcgs( Pcgs( SmallGroup( 96, 120 ) ) ); Pcgs([ f1, f2, f3, f4, f5, f6 ]) gap> LGWeights(p); [ [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 2, 2 ], [ 1, 3, 2 ], [ 2, 1, 3 ] ]
Thus the first group, SmallGroup(96, 220)
, has a lower nilpotent series of length 1; that is, the group is nilpotent. It is a direct product of its Sylow subgroups. Moreover the Sylow 2-subgroup is generated by the elements f1, f2, f3, f4, f6
, and the Sylow 3-subgroup is generated by f5
. The lower 2-central series of the Sylow 2-subgroup has length 2 and the second subgroup in this series is generated by f6
.
The second group, SmallGroup(96, 120)
, has a lower nilpotent series of length 2 and hence is not nilpotent. The second subgroup in this series is just the Sylow 3-subgroup and it is generated by f6
. The subgroup generated by f1
, ..., f5
is a Sylow 2-subgroup of the group and also a head complement to the second head of the group. Its lower 2-central series has length 2.
In this example the FamilyPcgs
(46.1-1) value of the groups used was a special pcgs, but this is not necessarily the case. For performance reasons it can be worth to enforce this, see IsomorphismSpecialPcGroup
(46.5-3).
‣ IsInducedPcgsWrtSpecialPcgs ( pcgs ) | ( property ) |
tests whether pcgs is induced with respect to a special pcgs.
‣ InducedPcgsWrtSpecialPcgs ( G ) | ( attribute ) |
computes an induced pcgs with respect to the special pcgs of the parent of G.
InducedPcgsWrtSpecialPcgs
will return a pcgs induced by a special pcgs (which might differ from the one you had in mind). If you need an induced pcgs compatible with a given special pcgs use InducedPcgs
(45.7-4) for this special pcgs.
When working with a polycyclic group, one often needs to compute matrix operations of the group on a factor of the group. For this purpose there are the functions described in 45.14-1 to 45.14-3.
In certain situations, for example within the computation of conjugacy classes of finite soluble groups as described in [MN89], affine actions of groups are required. For this purpose we introduce the functions AffineAction
(45.14-4) and AffineActionLayer
(45.14-5).
‣ VectorSpaceByPcgsOfElementaryAbelianGroup ( mpcgs, fld ) | ( function ) |
returns the vector space over fld corresponding to the modulo pcgs mpcgs. Note that mpcgs has to define an elementary abelian p-group where p is the characteristic of fld.
‣ LinearAction ( gens, basisvectors, linear ) | ( operation ) |
‣ LinearOperation ( gens, basisvectors, linear ) | ( operation ) |
returns a list of matrices, one for each element of gens, which corresponds to the matrix action of the elements in gens on the basis basisvectors via linear.
‣ LinearActionLayer ( G, gens, pcgs ) | ( function ) |
‣ LinearOperationLayer ( G, gens, pcgs ) | ( function ) |
returns a list of matrices, one for each element of gens, which corresponds to the matrix action of G on the vector space corresponding to the modulo pcgs pcgs.
‣ AffineAction ( gens, basisvectors, linear, transl ) | ( operation ) |
return a list of matrices, one for each element of gens, which corresponds to the affine action of the elements in gens on the basis basisvectors via linear with translation transl.
‣ AffineActionLayer ( G, gens, pcgs, transl ) | ( function ) |
returns a list of matrices, one for each element of gens, which corresponds to the affine action of G on the vector space corresponding to the modulo pcgs pcgs with translation transl.
gap> G := SmallGroup( 96, 51 ); <pc group of size 96 with 6 generators> gap> spec := SpecialPcgs( G ); Pcgs([ f1, f2, f3, f4, f5, f6 ]) gap> LGWeights( spec ); [ [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 2 ], [ 1, 1, 3 ], [ 1, 2, 2 ], [ 1, 2, 2 ], [ 1, 3, 2 ] ] gap> mpcgs := InducedPcgsByPcSequence( spec, spec{[4,5,6]} ); Pcgs([ f4, f5, f6 ]) gap> npcgs := InducedPcgsByPcSequence( spec, spec{[6]} ); Pcgs([ f6 ]) gap> modu := mpcgs mod npcgs; [ f4, f5 ] gap> mat:=LinearActionLayer( G, spec{[1,2,3]}, modu ); [ <an immutable 2x2 matrix over GF2>, <an immutable 2x2 matrix over GF2>, <an immutable 2x2 matrix over GF2> ] gap> Print( mat, "\n" ); [ [ [ Z(2)^0, 0*Z(2) ], [ 0*Z(2), Z(2)^0 ] ], [ [ Z(2)^0, 0*Z(2) ], [ 0*Z(2), Z(2)^0 ] ], [ [ Z(2)^0, 0*Z(2) ], [ 0*Z(2), Z(2)^0 ] ] ]
If a pcgs pcgs is known for a group G, then orbits and stabilizers can be computed by a special method which is particularly efficient. Note that within this function only the elements in pcgs and the relative orders of pcgs are needed. Hence this function works effectively even if the elementary operations for pcgs are slow.
‣ StabilizerPcgs ( pcgs, pnt[, acts][, act] ) | ( function ) |
computes the stabilizer in the group generated by pcgs of the point pnt. If given, acts are elements by which pcgs acts, act is the acting function. This function returns a pcgs for the stabilizer which is induced by the ParentPcgs
of pcgs, that is it is compatible with pcgs.
‣ Pcgs_OrbitStabilizer ( pcgs, domain, pnt, oprs, opr ) | ( function ) |
runs a solvable group orbit-stabilizer algorithm on pnt with pcgs acting via the images oprs and the operation function opr. The domain domain can be used to speed up search, if it is not known, false
can be given instead. The function returns a record with components orbit
, stabpcgs
and lengths
, the latter indicating the lengths of the orbit whenever it got extended. This can be used to recompute transversal elements. This function should be used only inside algorithms when speed is essential.
For the following operations there are special methods for groups with pcgs installed:
IsNilpotentGroup
(39.15-3), IsSupersolvableGroup
(39.15-8), Size
(30.4-6), CompositionSeries
(39.17-5), ConjugacyClasses
(39.10-2), Centralizer
(35.4-4), FrattiniSubgroup
(39.12-6), PrefrattiniSubgroup
(39.12-7), MaximalSubgroups
(39.19-7) and related operations, HallSystem
(39.13-6) and related operations, MinimalGeneratingSet
(39.22-3), Centre
(35.4-5), Intersection
(30.5-2), AutomorphismGroup
(40.7-1), IrreducibleModules
(71.15-1).
There are a variety of algorithms to compute conjugacy classes and centralizers in solvable groups via epimorphic images ([FN79], [MN89], [The93]). Usually these are only invoked as methods, but it is possible to access the algorithm directly.
‣ ClassesSolvableGroup ( G, mode[, opt] ) | ( function ) |
computes conjugacy classes and centralizers in solvable groups. G is the acting group. mode indicates the type of the calculation:
0 Conjugacy classes
4 Conjugacy test for the two elements in opt.candidates
In mode 0 the function returns a list of records containing components representative and centralizer. In mode 4 it returns a conjugating element.
The optional record opt may contain the following components that will affect the algorithm's behaviour:
pcgs
is a pcgs that will be used for the calculation. The attribute EANormalSeriesByPcgs
(45.11-4) must return an appropriate series of normal subgroups with elementary abelian factors among them. The algorithm will step down this series. In the case of the calculation of rational classes, it must be a pcgs refining a central series.
candidates
is a list of elements for which canonical representatives are to be computed or for which a conjugacy test is performed. They must be given in mode 4. In mode 0 a list of classes corresponding to candidates
is returned (which may contain duplicates). The representative
s chosen are canonical with respect to pcgs
. The records returned also contain components operator
such that candidate ^ operator = representative
.
consider
is a function consider( fhome, rep, cenp, K, L )
. Here fhome
is a home pcgs for the factor group F in which the calculation currently takes place, rep
is an element of the factor and cenp
is a pcgs for the centralizer of rep
modulo K
. In mode 0, when lifting from F/K
to F/L
(note: for efficiency reasons, F can be different from G or L
might be not trivial) this function is called before performing the actual lifting and only those representatives for which it returns true
are passed to the next level. This permits for example the calculation of only those classes with small centralizers or classes of restricted orders.
‣ CentralizerSizeLimitConsiderFunction ( sz ) | ( function ) |
returns a function (with arguments fhome
, rep
, cen
, K
, L
) that can be used in ClassesSolvableGroup
(45.17-1) as the consider
component of the options record. It will restrict the lifting to those classes, for which the size of the centralizer (in the factor) is at most sz.
See also SubgroupsSolvableGroup
(39.21-3).
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