Classical groups
Finite groups
Group schemes
Topological groups
Lie groups
Super-Lie groups
Higher groups
Cohomology and Extensions
Related concepts
exceptional structures, exceptional isomorphisms
exceptional finite rotation groups:
and Kac-Moody groups:
exceptional Jordan superalgebra,
The Mathieu groups, denoted , , , and are five of the sporadic finite simple groups in the Happy Family. They were first described in the 1860-70s by Émile Mathieu, and the first such groups to be discovered.
They arise as the automorphism groups of Steiner systems. The orders of the groups are as follows:
The Matthieu group is the automorphism group of the binary Golay code; this is a vector space over the field . The other groups can be obtained as stabilisers of various (sets of) elements of the Golay code, and hence are subgroups of . The Mathieu groups form the so-called first generation of the happy family: the collection of 20 sporadic groups which are subgroups of the Monster group.
N-cafe blogpost on the groupoid .
John Conway, Noam D. Elkies and Jeremy L. Martin, “The Mathieu group and its pseudogroup extension ”, Experimental Mathematics 15 (2006), 223–236. Eprint.
See also
Last revised on August 27, 2019 at 12:13:54. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.