Title: Finite Simple Groups
1Finite Simple Groups
2What is a Finite Simple Group?
- Only normal subgroups are itself and the identity
- Building blocks
- Similar to primes in Number Theory and the
periodic elements in Chemistry
Examples Abelian Simple Groups
where n 1 or is prime
Non-Abelian Simple Groups (harder to describe)
where n 5
3Classifying the Finite Simple Groups
- Each finite simple group is either
- - Lie type
- - cyclic groups of prime order
- - alternating groups
- - one of the 26 sporadic groups
4Classification Theorem
- Involved over 100 mathematicians in total from
- United States
- England
- Germany
- France
- Norway
- Japan
- Korea
- and others
- 1870 2004
- 10,000 pages in total (Enormous Theorem)
5Evariste Galois (1811-1832)
- Observations of polynomials of degree five
- Made the first distinction of finite simple
groups in1832 - Died at the age of 20
6Emile Mathieu (1835-1890)
- Studied permutation groups during 1860s
- Discovered 5 finite simple groups that were not
Lie type - First to do work with sporadic groups
- M11, M12, M22, M23, M24
7Camille Jordan (1838-1922)
- Expanded the study of group theory in 1870 using
Galois research -
- Developed an organized system for understanding
simple groups - Classified the alternating and classical linear
groups
8Ludwig Sylow (1832-1918)
- Developed theorems on powers of primes that
divide the order of a group in 1870s - Work was based on Lagranges Theorem
- Provided future mathematicians tools to
classifying more simple groups
9Otto Holder (1859-1937)
- In 1892, published a paper proving all finite
simple groups up to order 200 had been discovered - Marked official start to the classification
project - Work relied on Sylows theorems
10Frank Cole George Miller(1861-1926)
(1863-1951)
- Extended the list up to groups of order 2001 in
1900
- Determined all simple groups up to order 660
- Further investigated Mathieu groups and
classified them as sporadic - since they did not produce infinitely many
possibilities of other groups
11Ferdinand Frobenius (1849-1917)
- Changed the way of thinking in group theory to
incorporate conjugacy classes - Elaborated on Sylows Theorems and introduced
group characters and representation theory - Produced the irreducible characters for various
groups in early 1900s
12William Burnside (1852-1927)
- Wrote the first book on group theory in English
in 1897 - In 1911, observed that character theory could be
used to prove nonabelian simple groups of
odd order do not exist (not actually proven until
50 years later) - Burnsides Problem on finiteness of groups is
still studied today
13Philip Hall (1904-1982)
- Greatly inspired by Burnside, revived the study
of group theory after World War I - Formulated a systematic method for classifying
groups of prime-power order in 1932, a
fundamental source of modern group theory
14Claude Chevalley (1909-1984)
- In 1950, made a distinction within Lie-type
groups, called Chevalley groups - Showed how to obtain finite versions of Lie-type
groups in all families - Work was used to make a distinction between
classical and sporadic groups
15Richard Brauer (1901-1977)
- Furthered the development of classifying finite
simple groups using Frobenius group characters
and character theory during the 1950s
16Walter Feit John Thompson(1930-2004)
(1932- )
- In 1963, the two proved Burnsides theory that
every finite simple group has even order in a 255
page journal, known as Feit-Thompson Theorem -
- Thompson won the Fields Medal in 1970
17Zvonimir Janko Michio Suzuki(1932-
) (1926-1998)
- During the 1960s, both mathematicians
classified other types of sporadic groups aside
from Mathieus original five. - J1, J2, J3, J4 (J1 has order 175,650)
- Suz or Sz has order 213 37 52 7 11 13
448345497600
18Daniel Gorenstein (1923-1992)
- Coach
- Guided the classification project and helped to
organize the research pouring in - Declared the project complete in 1981
19Michael Aschbacher Stephen Smith(1944- )
- Closed the gaps within the classification
project and took 7 years to correct errors within
the proof - Declared in 2004 that the project was complete
and could now be regarded as a theorem
20Finite Simple Groups Song
- (of the 1960s, author unknown, Sung to the tune
of "Sweet Betsy from Pike") - What are the orders of all simple groups?I speak
of the honest ones, not of the loops.It seems
that old Burnside their orders has
guessedexcept of the cyclic ones, even the
rest. - Groups made up with permutes will produce
moreFor An is simple, if n exceedes 4.Then,
there was Sir Matthew who came into
viewexhibiting groups of an order quite new. - Still others have come on the study this
thing.Of Artin and Chevalley now shall
sing.With matrices finite they made quite a
list.The question is Could there be others
they've missed? - Suzuki and Ree then maintained it's the casethat
these methods had not reached the end of the
chase.They wrote down some matrices, just four
by four,that made up a simple group. Why not
make more? - And then came up the opus of Thompson and
Feitwhich shed on the problem remarkable
light.A group, when the order won't factor by
two,is cyclic or solvable. That's what's true.
21Song (continued)
- Suzuki and Ree had caused eyebrows to raise,but
the theoreticians they just couldn't faze.Their
groups were not new if you added a twist,you
could get them from old ones with a flick of the
wrist. - Still, some hardy souls felt a thorn in their
side.For the five groups of Mathieu all reason
defiednot A_n, not twisted, and not
Chevalley.They called them sporadic and filed
them away. - Are Mathieu groups creatures of heaven or
hell?Zvonimir Janko determined to tell.He found
out what nobody wanted to knowthe masters had
missed 1 7 5 5 6 0. - The floodgates were opened! New groups were the
rage!(And twelve or more sprouded, to greet the
new age.)By Janko and Conway and Fischer and
Held,McLaughtin, Suzuki, and Higman, and Sims. - No doubt you noted the last lines don't
rhyme.Well, that is, quite simply, a sign of the
time.There's chaos, not order, among simple
groupsand maybe we'd better go back to the
loops.
22References
- Doherty, F. (1997). A History of Finite Simple
Groups. Retrieved November 27, 2010
fromhttp//math.ucdenver.edu/graduate/thesis/fdoh
erty.pdf - Â
- Â
- Elwes, R. (2006). An enormous theorem the
classification of finite simple groups. Plus
Magazine, Issue 41. University of Cambridge.
Retrieved November 27, 2010 from
http//plus.maths.org/issue41/features/elwes/index
.html - Â
- Â
- Gallian, J. (2010). Contemporary Abstract
Algebra. Belmont, CA Brooks/Cole Cengage
Learning. - Â
- Â
- OConnor, J. Robertson, E. (2010). The MacTutor
History of Mathematics Archive. Retrieved
November 27, 2010 from http//www-history.mcs.st-
andrews.ac.uk/index.html. - Â
- Â
- Solomon, R. (2001). A Brief Classification of the
Finite Simple Groups. Retrieved November 27, 2010
from http//www.ams.org/journals/bull/2001-38-03/
S0273-0979-01-00909-0/S0273-0979-01-00909-0.pdf - Â
- Â
- Zubrinic, D. (2007). Zvonimir Janko outstanding
Croatian mathematician. Retrieved November 27,
2010 from http//www.croatianhistory.net/etf/jank
o/index.html. - Â