Pro-finite Group

In mathematics, pro-finite groups are groups that are in a certain sense assembled from finite groups; they share many properties with the finite groups.

Definition

Formally, a pro-finite group is a group that is isomorphic to the inverse limit of an inverse system of finite groups. Pro-finite groups are naturally regarded as topological groups: each of the finite groups carries the discrete topology, and since the inverse limit is a subset of the product of these discrete spaces, it inherits a topology which turns it into a topological group.

Examples

  • Any product of finite groups is pro-finite.
  • The p-adic integers Zp are pro-finite (with respect to addition): they are the inverse limit of the finite groups Z/pnZ where n ranges over all natural numbers and the natural maps Z/pnZZ/pmZ (nm) are used for the limit process.
  • The Galois theory of field extensions of infinite degree gives rise naturally to Galois groups that are pro-finite. Specifically, if L/K is a Galois extension, we consider the group G = Gal(L/K) consisting of all field automorphisms of L which keep all elements of K fixed. This group is the inverse limit of the finite groups Gal(F/K), where F ranges over all intermediate fields such that F/K is a finite Galois extension. For the limit process, we use the restriction homomorphisms Gal(F1/K) → Gal(F2/K), where F2F1. The topology we obtain on Gal(L/K) is known as the Krull topology after Wolfgang Krull (1899 - 1971). Interestingly, every pro-finite group is isomorphic to one arising from Galois theory.

Properties and facts

Every pro-finite group is a compact Hausdorff space: since all finite discrete spaces are compact Hausdorff spaces, their product will be a compact Hausdorff space by Tychonoff's theorem; the direct limit is a closed subset of this product and is therefore also compact Hausdorff. Every pro-finite group is totally disconnected and even more: a topological group is pro-finite if and only if it is Hausdorff, compact and totally disconnected. Every product of (arbitrarily many) pro-finite groups is pro-finite; the topology arising from the pro-finiteness agrees with the product topology. Every closed subgroup of a pro-finite group is itself pro-finite; the topology arising from the pro-finiteness agrees with the subspace topology. If N is a closed normal subgroup of a pro-finite group G, then the factor group G/N is pro-finite; the topology arising from the pro-finiteness agrees with the quotient topology. Given an arbitrary group G, there is a related pro-finite group G^, the pro-finite completion of G. It is defined as the inverse limit of the groups G/N, where N runs through the normal subgroups in G of finite index (these normal subgroups are partially ordered by inclusion, which translates into an inverse system of natural homomorphisms between them). There is a natural homomorphism η : GG^, and the image of G under this homomorphism is dense in G^. The homomorphism η is injective if and only if the group G is residually finite (i.e. iff for every non-identity element g in G there exists a normal subgroup N in G of finite index that doesn't contain g). The homomorphism η is characterized by the following universal property: given any pro-finite group H and any group homomorphism f : GH, there exists a unique continuous group homomorphism g : G^H with f = gη. Since every pro-finite group G is compact Hausdorff, we have a Haar measure on G, which allows us to measure the "size" of subsets of G, compute certain probabilities, and integrate functions on G.

Ind-finite groups

There is a notion of ind-finite group, which is the concept dual to pro-finite groups; i.e. a group G is ind-finite if it is the direct limit of finite groups. The usual terminology is different: a group G is called locally finite if every finitely-generated subgroup is finite. This is equivalent, in fact, to being 'ind-finite'. By applying Pontryagin duality, one can see that abelian pro-finite groups are in duality with locally finite discrete abelian groups. The latter are just the abelian torsion groups. See also: locally cyclic group.

Further reading

  • Hendrik Lenstra: Profinite Groups, talk given in Oberwolfach, November 2003. online version.
  • Alexander Lubotzky: review of several books about pro-finite groups. Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 38 (2001), pages 475-479. online version.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
pope gregory xiv
pope gregory xv
pulitzer prize
parma
physical anthropology
peter pan
power (physics)
ps
photek
pai gow poker
pointer
protoscience
pope gregory xii
pickelhaube
pope gregory xiii
pankration
province of canada
polish corridor
peter guralnick
persephone
pandemic
phoniatrics
pervez musharraf
pomerania
progeny linux systems
ping
paul whitehouse
pawnbroker
process philosophy
pittsburgh pirates
pope siricius
pope sixtus i
pope sixtus ii
pope sixtus iii
paul bunyan
pear
peloponnesian league
powerpc
pope urban i
pope urban ii
pope urban iii
pope urban iv
pandora (mythology)
paul kelly