Error in proving subgroup is normal












0














Let $G$ be a $p$-group and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$ of index $p$ ($p$ is prime). Prove that $H$ is normal.



I have tried to prove it, but accidentally have proven the opposite by some error:



Let $G$ act on $G/H$ by conjugation. We have proven as a lemma that the number of fixed points of this action is equivalent to $|G/H|$ mod $p$, because $G$ is a $p$-group (see here). Thus, since $|G/H| = p equiv 0 $ mod $p$, it follows there are no fixed points. Thus $H$ is not a fixed point of the action, so there exists some $gin G$ such that $g.Hneq H implies gHg^{-1}neq H$. So $H$ is not normal in $G$.



I have tried to find the error but cannot. Where have I gone wrong? Is the action itself not well-defined? I am not sure how to proceed.










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  • 1




    $|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:16








  • 1




    "Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
    – астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:21






  • 1




    It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
    – AdditIdent
    Nov 28 '18 at 5:41












  • Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 20:51
















0














Let $G$ be a $p$-group and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$ of index $p$ ($p$ is prime). Prove that $H$ is normal.



I have tried to prove it, but accidentally have proven the opposite by some error:



Let $G$ act on $G/H$ by conjugation. We have proven as a lemma that the number of fixed points of this action is equivalent to $|G/H|$ mod $p$, because $G$ is a $p$-group (see here). Thus, since $|G/H| = p equiv 0 $ mod $p$, it follows there are no fixed points. Thus $H$ is not a fixed point of the action, so there exists some $gin G$ such that $g.Hneq H implies gHg^{-1}neq H$. So $H$ is not normal in $G$.



I have tried to find the error but cannot. Where have I gone wrong? Is the action itself not well-defined? I am not sure how to proceed.










share|cite|improve this question


















  • 1




    $|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:16








  • 1




    "Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
    – астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:21






  • 1




    It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
    – AdditIdent
    Nov 28 '18 at 5:41












  • Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 20:51














0












0








0







Let $G$ be a $p$-group and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$ of index $p$ ($p$ is prime). Prove that $H$ is normal.



I have tried to prove it, but accidentally have proven the opposite by some error:



Let $G$ act on $G/H$ by conjugation. We have proven as a lemma that the number of fixed points of this action is equivalent to $|G/H|$ mod $p$, because $G$ is a $p$-group (see here). Thus, since $|G/H| = p equiv 0 $ mod $p$, it follows there are no fixed points. Thus $H$ is not a fixed point of the action, so there exists some $gin G$ such that $g.Hneq H implies gHg^{-1}neq H$. So $H$ is not normal in $G$.



I have tried to find the error but cannot. Where have I gone wrong? Is the action itself not well-defined? I am not sure how to proceed.










share|cite|improve this question













Let $G$ be a $p$-group and let $H$ be a subgroup of $G$ of index $p$ ($p$ is prime). Prove that $H$ is normal.



I have tried to prove it, but accidentally have proven the opposite by some error:



Let $G$ act on $G/H$ by conjugation. We have proven as a lemma that the number of fixed points of this action is equivalent to $|G/H|$ mod $p$, because $G$ is a $p$-group (see here). Thus, since $|G/H| = p equiv 0 $ mod $p$, it follows there are no fixed points. Thus $H$ is not a fixed point of the action, so there exists some $gin G$ such that $g.Hneq H implies gHg^{-1}neq H$. So $H$ is not normal in $G$.



I have tried to find the error but cannot. Where have I gone wrong? Is the action itself not well-defined? I am not sure how to proceed.







abstract-algebra p-groups






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asked Nov 28 '18 at 3:13









MathTrain

669215




669215








  • 1




    $|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:16








  • 1




    "Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
    – астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:21






  • 1




    It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
    – AdditIdent
    Nov 28 '18 at 5:41












  • Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 20:51














  • 1




    $|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:16








  • 1




    "Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
    – астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
    Nov 28 '18 at 3:21






  • 1




    It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
    – AdditIdent
    Nov 28 '18 at 5:41












  • Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
    – Randall
    Nov 28 '18 at 20:51








1




1




$|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
– Randall
Nov 28 '18 at 3:16






$|G/H|$ is $p$, and the number of fixed points is congruent to this mod $p$. But this is satisfied by both $0$ as well as $p$: they're both congruent to $p$ mod $p$. So, you can't automatically say there are no fixed points.
– Randall
Nov 28 '18 at 3:16






1




1




"Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
– астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
Nov 28 '18 at 3:21




"Since $|G/H| equiv 0 mod p$, there are no fixed points". No, it just means that the number of fixed points is multiple of $p$, like $2p,p, 0$ etc.
– астон вілла олоф мэллбэрг
Nov 28 '18 at 3:21




1




1




It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
– AdditIdent
Nov 28 '18 at 5:41






It doesn't even make sense to do quotient before knowing nH$ is normal, it is exactly what to prove. The statement indeed follows directly from Sylow Theorem.
– AdditIdent
Nov 28 '18 at 5:41














Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
– Randall
Nov 28 '18 at 20:51




Now that I think about it, I don't see how this action is an action at all.
– Randall
Nov 28 '18 at 20:51










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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1














Thinking more about this, there are two issues with your argument. The one raised already is that the orbit-stabilizer techniques show that the number of fixed points must be congruent to $0 bmod p$, but this doesn't mean it has to be the integer $0$. Hence there could be fixed points.



I think the bigger issue is your action itself. If $H$ is not known to be normal (yet), then $G/H$ can only mean the set of left (or right, pick a side) cosets of $H$ in $G$. Standard actions of $G$ on this set in standard Sylow-ish proofs involve action by left multiplication, not conjugation. Indeed, if your action is "defined" by
$$
g cdot xH = g(xH)g^{-1}
$$

this doesn't make any sense at all: how is $g(xH)g^{-1}$ again a left coset? There's no reason.






share|cite|improve this answer





















  • You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
    – MathTrain
    Nov 28 '18 at 21:08



















0














Randall commented correctly that the fact that $|G/H|=p$ does not mean that the number of fixed points is a multiple of $p$, not that it is zero.






share|cite|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
    2






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    2 Answers
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    1














    Thinking more about this, there are two issues with your argument. The one raised already is that the orbit-stabilizer techniques show that the number of fixed points must be congruent to $0 bmod p$, but this doesn't mean it has to be the integer $0$. Hence there could be fixed points.



    I think the bigger issue is your action itself. If $H$ is not known to be normal (yet), then $G/H$ can only mean the set of left (or right, pick a side) cosets of $H$ in $G$. Standard actions of $G$ on this set in standard Sylow-ish proofs involve action by left multiplication, not conjugation. Indeed, if your action is "defined" by
    $$
    g cdot xH = g(xH)g^{-1}
    $$

    this doesn't make any sense at all: how is $g(xH)g^{-1}$ again a left coset? There's no reason.






    share|cite|improve this answer





















    • You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
      – MathTrain
      Nov 28 '18 at 21:08
















    1














    Thinking more about this, there are two issues with your argument. The one raised already is that the orbit-stabilizer techniques show that the number of fixed points must be congruent to $0 bmod p$, but this doesn't mean it has to be the integer $0$. Hence there could be fixed points.



    I think the bigger issue is your action itself. If $H$ is not known to be normal (yet), then $G/H$ can only mean the set of left (or right, pick a side) cosets of $H$ in $G$. Standard actions of $G$ on this set in standard Sylow-ish proofs involve action by left multiplication, not conjugation. Indeed, if your action is "defined" by
    $$
    g cdot xH = g(xH)g^{-1}
    $$

    this doesn't make any sense at all: how is $g(xH)g^{-1}$ again a left coset? There's no reason.






    share|cite|improve this answer





















    • You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
      – MathTrain
      Nov 28 '18 at 21:08














    1












    1








    1






    Thinking more about this, there are two issues with your argument. The one raised already is that the orbit-stabilizer techniques show that the number of fixed points must be congruent to $0 bmod p$, but this doesn't mean it has to be the integer $0$. Hence there could be fixed points.



    I think the bigger issue is your action itself. If $H$ is not known to be normal (yet), then $G/H$ can only mean the set of left (or right, pick a side) cosets of $H$ in $G$. Standard actions of $G$ on this set in standard Sylow-ish proofs involve action by left multiplication, not conjugation. Indeed, if your action is "defined" by
    $$
    g cdot xH = g(xH)g^{-1}
    $$

    this doesn't make any sense at all: how is $g(xH)g^{-1}$ again a left coset? There's no reason.






    share|cite|improve this answer












    Thinking more about this, there are two issues with your argument. The one raised already is that the orbit-stabilizer techniques show that the number of fixed points must be congruent to $0 bmod p$, but this doesn't mean it has to be the integer $0$. Hence there could be fixed points.



    I think the bigger issue is your action itself. If $H$ is not known to be normal (yet), then $G/H$ can only mean the set of left (or right, pick a side) cosets of $H$ in $G$. Standard actions of $G$ on this set in standard Sylow-ish proofs involve action by left multiplication, not conjugation. Indeed, if your action is "defined" by
    $$
    g cdot xH = g(xH)g^{-1}
    $$

    this doesn't make any sense at all: how is $g(xH)g^{-1}$ again a left coset? There's no reason.







    share|cite|improve this answer












    share|cite|improve this answer



    share|cite|improve this answer










    answered Nov 28 '18 at 20:50









    Randall

    9,12611129




    9,12611129












    • You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
      – MathTrain
      Nov 28 '18 at 21:08


















    • You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
      – MathTrain
      Nov 28 '18 at 21:08
















    You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
    – MathTrain
    Nov 28 '18 at 21:08




    You're correct, and it turns out it does work, but only because the conclusion that H is normal is true. One can prove that with a totally different argument, but I think an interesting thing about this one is it actually proves (once you know H is normal) that every left coset is fixed under conjugation.
    – MathTrain
    Nov 28 '18 at 21:08











    0














    Randall commented correctly that the fact that $|G/H|=p$ does not mean that the number of fixed points is a multiple of $p$, not that it is zero.






    share|cite|improve this answer


























      0














      Randall commented correctly that the fact that $|G/H|=p$ does not mean that the number of fixed points is a multiple of $p$, not that it is zero.






      share|cite|improve this answer
























        0












        0








        0






        Randall commented correctly that the fact that $|G/H|=p$ does not mean that the number of fixed points is a multiple of $p$, not that it is zero.






        share|cite|improve this answer












        Randall commented correctly that the fact that $|G/H|=p$ does not mean that the number of fixed points is a multiple of $p$, not that it is zero.







        share|cite|improve this answer












        share|cite|improve this answer



        share|cite|improve this answer










        answered Nov 28 '18 at 3:21









        MathTrain

        669215




        669215






























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