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Related concepts
A finite group is a group whose underlying set is finite.
This is equivalently a group object in FinSet.
Let be a finite group with order .
(Cauchy)
If a prime number divides , then equivalently
has an element of order ;
has a subgroup of order of a group .
See at Cauchy's theorem for more.
Every finite group of odd order is a solvable group.
See at Feit-Thompson theorem.
The structure of finite groups is a very hard problem; the classification of finite simple groups alone is one of the largest theorems ever proved (certainly if measured by number of journal pages needed for a complete proof).
All finite groups are built out of simple groups, but the ways to do this have not (yet?) been fully classified.
A point of view that can be useful in particular cases – more useful than the Jordan-Hölder theorem – is provided by the F-theorem?, due to Hans Fitting in the solvable case and Helmut Bender in the general case. It states that , where is the generalized Fitting subgroup of , defined below, is the subgroup of consisting of all elements commuting with every element of , and for any group is the center of , the subgroup of consisting of all elements commuting with every element of . Thus is somehow assembled from , whose structure has some easy features, and , which is isomorphic to a subgroup of the automorphism group of and which has a quotient group isomorphic to .
One definition of is that it is the subgroup generated by all normal subgroups of possessing subgroups for some integer such that ; for all , , and distinct subscripts and ; and each either has prime power order or is a quasisimple group. Bender proved that itself enjoys these properties.
Finally a group is called quasisimple if and only if and is simple. The finite quasisimple groups have been classified, as a consequence of the classification of finite simple groups and the calculation of the Schur multiplier of each finite simple group.
For more on this see
The meaning of the title is this curious fact (based on empirical evidence, anyway): if we are counting isomorphism classes of finite groups up to a given order of a grouporder?, then most of them are -primary groups (and therefore nilpotent; see at class equation).
For example, it is reported that “out of the 49,910,529,484 groups of order at most 2000, a staggering 49,487,365,422 of them have order 1024”.
(It has also been suggested that a more meaningful weighting would divide each isomorphism class representative by the order of its automorphism group; as of this writing the nLab authors don’t know how much this would affect the strength of the assertion “most finite groups are nilpotent”.)
Discussion can be found here and here.
For every natural number , the cyclic group
is finite.
The largest finite group that is also a sporadic simple group, i.e., does not belong(up to isomorphism) to the infinite family of the alternating groups or to the infinite family of finite groups of Lie type, is the Monster group.
finite subgroups of SO(3) and finite subgroups of SU(2) have an ADE classification
the general linear group over prime fields are finit, such as GL(2,3)
see also at finite abelian group.
ADE classification and McKay correspondence
Early textbook accounts:
William Burnside, Theory of Groups of Finite Order, 1897 (pdf), reprinted by Cambridge University Press 2012 (doi:10.1017/CBO9781139237253)
G. A. Miller, H. F. Blichfeldt, Leonard E. Dickson, Theory and applications of finite groups, Dover, New York, 1916 (ark:/13960/t0ht2kb4x)
Discussion in homotopy type theory/univalent foundations of mathematics:
On the representation theory (linear representations) of finite groups over algebraic number fields:
Discussion of group characters and group cohomology of finite groups:
Michael Atiyah, Characters and cohomology of finite groups, Publications Mathématiques de l’IHÉS, 9 (1961), p. 23-64 (numdam:PMIHES_1961__9__23_0)
Alejandro Adem, R. James Milgram, Cohomology of Finite Groups, Springer 2004
Narthana Epa, Platonic 2-groups, 2010 (pdf)
See also:
Discussion of free actions of finite groups on n-spheres (see also at ADE classification) includes
John Milnor, Groups which act on without fixed points, American Journal of Mathematics Vol. 79, No. 3 (Jul., 1957), pp. 623-630 (JSTOR)
Adam Keenan, Which finite groups act freely on spheres?, 2003 (pdf)
With an eye towards application to (the standard model of) particle physics:
Last revised on September 7, 2023 at 12:29:24. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.