nLab
semidirect product

Semidirect products

Definitions

If a group G acts on a group Γ on the left, then there is a semidirect product group whose underlying set is Γ×G but whose multiplication is

(δ,h)(γ,g)=(δ hγ,hg)(\delta,h)(\gamma,g)= (\delta \, ^h \gamma, h g)

for δ,γΓ,h,gG. This is called in group theory the semidirect product (see for example the Wikipedia entry) and written ΓG. There is a projection morphism p:ΓGG , (γ,g)g. A section s of this can be identified with a derivation d, i.e. d satisfies d(hg)=(dh) h(dg).

It is useful to generalise this to the case Γ is a groupoid. This occurs if for example Γ=π 1X where X is a (left) G-space.

So if X=Ob(Γ), then ΓG has object set X and a morphism yx is a pair (γ,g) such that γ:ygx in Γ. The composition law is then given again by

(δ,h)(γ,g)=(δ hγ,hg)(\delta,h)(\gamma,g)= (\delta \, ^h \gamma, h g)

if (δ,h):zy, so that δ:zhy in Γ.

If Γ is a discrete groupoid, and so identified with X, then we get XG which is the action groupoid of the action. In this case the projection p:XGG is a covering morphism of groupoids, i.e. any gG has a unique lifting with given initial point. Note that if YX is a covering map of spaces, then the induced morphism of fundamental groupoids is a covering morphism of groupoids. If q:Hπ 1X is a covering morphism of groupoids, and X admits a universal covering map, then there is a topology on Y=Ob(H) such that Hπ 1Y. In this way, the category of covering maps of X is equivalent to the category of covering morphisms of π 1X.

The utility of the more general construction is that there is notion of orbit groupoid Γ//G (identify any γ and gγ) and it is a theorem that the orbit groupoid is isomorphic to the quotient groupoid

(ΓG)/N(\Gamma \rtimes \, G)/N

where N is the normal closure in ΓG of all elements (1 x,g). Details are in the book reference below (but the conventions are not quite the same).

References

  • R. Brown, “Topology and groupoids”, Booksurge 2006.

  • P.J. Higgins and J. Taylor, The Fundamental Groupoid and Homotopy Crossed Complex of an Orbit Space, in K.H. Kamps et al., ed., Category Theory: Proceedings Gummersbach 1981, Springer LNM 962 (1982) 115–122.