Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Direct limit of groups

Direct limit of a direct system of groups From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

In mathematics, a direct limit of groups is the direct limit of a direct system of groups. These are central objects of study in algebraic topology, especially stable homotopy theory and homological algebra. They are sometimes called finitary or stable groups, though this latter term normally means something quite different in model theory.

Certain examples of stable groups are easier to study than "unstable" groups, the groups occurring in the limit. This is a priori surprising, given that they are generally infinite-dimensional, constructed as limits of groups with finite-dimensional representations.

The notion of a direct limit captures many vague but intuitive ideas of "group limits": the finite Symmetric groups should limit to an infinite symmetric group and the subgroups of a group should limit to , in some sense. Under the direct limit construction, group families (symmetric groups, dihedral groups, general linear groups , etc) will generally limit to the finitary or stable subgroup of the corresponding infinite group: the groups don't limit to the permutation group of a countable set, , but do limit to its subgroup of permutations which permute only finitely many objects. We'll also often see that recovering a group as a direct limit of its subgroups can be done simply (and sometimes only) with its finitely generated subgroups. Direct limits have a more general definition in Category theory, which reduces to the definition below in the category of groups, and more generally, any concrete category.

Remove ads

Definition

Let be a set with a transitive, reflexive binary relation (a preorder). We call a directed set if, for all and in , there exists some such that and . Let be a family of groups indexed by with group homomorphisms for all in such that

  1. for all in
  2. for all in .

The pair is called a direct system, and we form the set. The direct limit of the direct system is denoted by and is defined on equivalence classes of the disjoint union of the with for and if , where is the upper bound of and . That is,

For , , and upper bound of and , we define the binary operation on by setting , where the multiplication is performed in . The operation is well defined by the compatibility condition on the , and associativity follows from associativity in the . Since each map is a homomorphism, all identities lie in the same equivalence class, and this class forms the identity of . Finally, the inverse of for is simply .

Like many categorical constructions, direct limits are unique in a strong sense: for two direct limits and of a direct system, there exists a unique isomorphism .

Remove ads

Examples

  • The set of under its usual order forms a directed set which indexes the family of finite symmetric groups . With the usual embeddings , these groups and maps form a direct system with direct limit (isomorphic to) the subgroup of the symmetric group on countabaly many things which contains permutations permutating only finitely many objects. If the integers are viewed under the altenate partial order of divisibility, and only the approriate embeddings are kept, the same direct limit is formed.
  • For a prime number , we form the direct system of factor groups with multiplication by homomorphisms . Setting forms a direct system with direct limit called the Prüfer group . One exists for each prime and consists of all roots of unity of all powers of . This demonstrates that for totally ordered index sets, only the maps need to be specified.
  • Each family of classical groups forms a direct system, via inclusion of matrices in the upper left corner, such as with a on the remaining diagonal entry and zeros everywhere else. The stable groups are denoted or . Bott periodicity computes the homotopy of the stable unitary group and stable orthogonal group. The Whitehead group of a ring (the first K-group) can be defined in terms of . Stable homotopy groups of spheres are the stable groups associated with the suspension functor.
Remove ads

Properties

  • If is a direct system with index set containing maximum element , then is (isomorphic to) . Similarly, if there exists some such that for all , , then is (isomorphic to) .
  • The collection of finitely generated subgroups of a given group can be partially ordered by inclusion. Finite sets of finitely generated subgroups are contained in the finitely generated subgroup , so the index set is indeed directed. With the inclusion morphisms , the direct limit is simply (isomorphic to) . An analogous result holds for rings, modules, algebras, etc. Note the requirement of finite generation may be weakened, as long as the index set remains directed. Often times, this is only possible if the entire group is included in the collection of subgroups.
  • Say is a direct system with index set , and a is an sub preorder on such that is a directed set and upper bounds under are upper bounds under . Then the directed systems and are isomorphic
Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads