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Encyclopedia > Abelianization

In mathematics, the derived group (or commutator subgroup) of a group G is the subgroup G1 generated by all the commutators of elements of G; that is, G1 = <[g,h] : g,h in G>.


Note that the set of all commutators of the group is, generally, not a group (in any interesting case). While clumsily defined, the commutator subgroup is important.


An abelian group has only trivial commutators. Hence its commutator subgroup is {1}. The converse is also (trivially) true.


The derived group, in a sense, gives a measure of how far G is from being abelian; the larger G1, the "less abelian" G is. In particular, G1 is equal to {1} if and only if the group G is abelian. A perfect group G is one with G1 = G.


If f : G _> H is a group homomorphism, then f(G1) is a subset of H1, because f maps commutators to commutators. This implies that the operation of forming derived groups is a functor from the category of groups to the category of groups.


Applying this to endomorphisms f, we find that G1 is a fully characteristic subgroup of G, and in particular a normal subgroup of G. The quotient G/G1 is an abelian group sometimes called G made abelian, or the abelianization of G. In a sense, it is the abelian group that's "closest" to G, which can be expressed by the following universal property: if p : G -> G/G1 is the canonical projection, and f : G -> A is any homomorphism from G to an abelian group A, then there exists exactly one homomorphism s : G/G1 -> A such that s o p = f. In the language of category theory: the functor which assigns to every group its abelianization is left adjoint to the forgetful functor which assigns to every abelian group its underlying group.


In particular, a quotient G/N of G is abelian if and only if N includes G1.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Encyclopedia4U - Abelian extension - Encyclopedia Article (206 words)
In abstract algebra, an abelian extension is a field extension for which the associated galois group is abelian.
In general extensions formed by adjoining any roots of unity are abelian.
There is an important analogy with the fundamental group in topology, which classifies all covering spaces of a space: abelian covers are classified by its abelianisation which relates directly to the first homology group.
Abelian - definition of Abelian in Encyclopedia (796 words)
Abelian groups are named after Niels Henrik Abel.
This is a special application of the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups in the case when G has torsion-free rank equal to 0.
The abelian group, together with group homomorphisms, form a category, the prototype of an abelian category.
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