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Derived group

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The derived (sub)group (or commutator (sub)group) of a group G is the smallest normal subgroup D(G) of G such that the quotient group G/D(G) is abelian.

Specifically, let G be a group. The group (G,G)=D(G) generated by the set of commutators of G is called the derived group of G. It is also called the commutator group of G, though in general it is distinct from the set of commutators of G. It is a normal subgroup of G—in fact, it is a characteristic subgroup.

Evidently, if H is a subgroup of G, then D(H) is a subgroup of D(G).

Proposition. Let G and G' be groups, and f: G \to G' be a group homomorphism. Then f(D(G)) \subseteq D(G'); in fact, f(D(G)) = D(f(G)), so in particular, if f is surjective, f(D(G)) = D(G').

Proof. If (a,b) is a commutator of G, then f((a,b)) = (f(a),f(b)) is a commutator of G'; thus f(D(G)) \subseteq D(G'). Suppose x,y are points in the image of G under f; let a,b be elements of G such that f(a)=x, f(b)=y. Then f(a,b) = (f(a),f(b)) = (x,y). Hence f(D(G)) = D(f(G)). \blacksquare

Corollary 1. The derived group D(G) is a characteristic subgroup of G. In particular, it is normal.

Corollary 2. The quotient group G/D(G) is commutative. Let \lambda be the canonical homomorphism from G to G/D(G). Let G' be an abelian group. Then every homomorphism f: G \to G can be expressed uniquely as f' \circ \pi, where f' : G/D(G) \to G' is a homomorphism.

Proof. Note that D(G/D(G)) = D(\lambda(G)) = \lambda(D(G)) = \{e\}; thus G/D(G) is abelian. If f:G\to H is a homomorphism, then f(D(G)) \subseteq D(H) = \{e\}. Thus the realtion f(a) = f(b) is compatible with equivalence mod D(G). \blacksquare

Corollary 3. Let H be a subgroup of G. Then D(G) \subseteq H if and only if H is normal in G and G/H is commutative.

Proof. If H contains D(G), then H/D(G) is normal in G/D(G), since every subgroup of an abelian group is normal; hence H is normal, and G/H is isomorphic to (G/D(G))/(H/D(G)), which is commutative. The converse follows from the previous corollary.

Corollary 4. Let X be a generating subset of G. Then D(G) is the normal subgroup generated by the set of commutators of elements of X.

Proof. Let H be the normal subgroup generated by the commutators of elements of X. By definition, H \subseteq D(G). On the other hand, the set X/H generates the group G/H; since the elements of X/H commute, G/H is abelian, and hence D(G) \subseteq H. \blacksquare

See also

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