Class equation and a group of order pq

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the application of the class equation to demonstrate that a group G of order pq, where p and q are distinct primes, contains an element of order p. Participants explore both abelian and non-abelian cases in their reasoning.

Discussion Character

  • Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants consider the implications of G being abelian versus non-abelian, with some arguing that if G is abelian, it can be expressed as a product of its Sylow subgroups, leading to an element of order p. Others analyze the consequences of assuming no element of order p exists, questioning the resulting structure of conjugacy classes and centralizers.

Discussion Status

The conversation is active, with participants offering insights and challenging each other's reasoning. Some have reached conclusions about the triviality of the center in non-abelian groups, while others are still exploring the implications of the class equation and the orders of conjugacy classes.

Contextual Notes

There is an ongoing debate about the nature of the center of G, with some participants asserting it must be trivial in the non-abelian case, while others suggest it could have order p. The discussion reflects a range of interpretations regarding the structure of G and its elements.

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Homework Statement


Use the class equation to show that greup G of order pq, with p and q prime, has an element of order p.


Homework Equations


|G| = \sum |C(x)| (class equation)
Z = center of the group G = {z\inG: zy = yz for all y in G}
|G| = |Z(x)||C(x)| (counting formula)


The Attempt at a Solution


So I was told that I should consider this problem in cases. First, assume that G is abelian and then assume G was non abelian.

So when G is abelian, |Z|= pq so Z = G. Since G is finite and any finite abelian group is a product of its Sylow subgroups G = C_{p} x C_{q}. So we can then see that G would have an element of order p.

Now, so far I have proved that if G is non abelian, our center has to be trivial i.e. |Z| = 1. Using this, the class equation becomes |G| = 1 + \sum |C(x)| (the sum is for the remaining conjugacy classes). From here is where I get stuck...Since the order of G is pq, the sumation on the right hand side will have to sum to pq -1 (but I have no idea if that is relevant).

Also, I tried assuming that there wasn't an element of order p. Then, every non trivial element x of G would have to be of order q (since it can't be of order 1, pq, or p and those are our only possible orders which divide the order of the group). From there, I can't quite see where to go from here. I know that every term on the right hand side must divide the order of the group, i.e. pq. So, since the order of the remaining conjugacy classes can't be 1 or pq, they have to be either of order p or order q. If the conjugacy class of x was order q, then the centralizer of any element x would have have to be of order p by the counting formula...We know the centralizer would have to contain the center and the element x of order q.

I feel like I am so close but I am just not seeing it at this point. Help please.
 
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First, if G is non abelian, |Z|<pq. It is not necessary that |Z|=1.

I think this is correct:
If we assume that G does not have an element of order p, then |Z(x)|=q for all x not in the center, where Z(x) is the centralizer of x. Then |C(x)|=p for all x not in the center. Then the class equation implies that there must be p conjugacy classes of order 1, i.e., |Z|=p, a contradiction. So G has an element of order p.
 
What you said is false.
If G is a non abelian group of order pq where p and q are distinct primes, the center is trivial. I proved this is homework and I know this for a fact.

Consider the quotient group G/Z. Suppose that Z is a non-trivial subgroup then its order is either p or q (because it can't be pq because then it would be abelian and can't be 1 because then it wouldn't be non trivial). So, the order of G/Z is either q or p. We know that every group of prime order is cyclic, so G/Z must be cyclic. But if G/Z is cyclic, then G is Abelian which is a contradiction.

There's your proof for why the center must be trivial.
 
My bad, you're totally correct. The reasoning for existence of an element of order p still goes through though. |Z|=p is still a contradiction.
 
I think you already basically have it, don't you? If you assume there is no element of order p then all of the conjugacy classes have to have p elements, because as you said, a conjugacy class with q elements would give a centralizer subgroup with p elements. So now what does the class equation tell you?
 
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How does there not being an element of order p imply that the centralizer is of order q? If every non identity element isn't of order p, it obviously has to be of order q since it can't be of order 1 or pq. Then the centralizer of an element x would have to be at least size q (<x> must be contained in Z(x) ) but it can not be all of pq. Are you assuming that p<q so that you can say that because then <x> would be maximal?

Also, I don't see how you are saying that the conjugacy classes being of order p implies that there must be p conjugacy classes of order 1? If the conjugacy class of every other element is of order p, doesn't the class equation imply that pq = 1 + np where n is some integer?
 
simmonj7 said:
How does there not being an element of order p imply that the centralizer is of order q? If every non identity element isn't of order p, it obviously has to be of order q since it can't be of order 1 or pq. Then the centralizer of an element x would have to be at least size q (<x> must be contained in Z(x) ) but it can not be all of pq. Are you assuming that p<q so that you can say that because then <x> would be maximal?

Also, I don't see how you are saying that the conjugacy classes being of order p implies that there must be p conjugacy classes of order 1? If the conjugacy class of every other element is of order p, doesn't the class equation imply that pq = 1 + np where n is some integer?

I thought you had spelled this out in your original post. But if x is an element with a conjugacy class containing q elements, then doesn't the centralizer subgroup of x contain p elements? Contradicting the statement there is no element of order p? Maybe I was reading between the lines? And you are claiming I said some stuff I didn't say. But I do agree that finally the class equation would say pq=1+np. That doesn't work.
 
Dick,
I wasn't responding to your post. I get what you are saying and yes I had spelled out what you said in my original post. I have the problem solved now. I just didn't understand the logic of the other person who was posting.

Thanks.
 
simmonj7 said:
Dick,
I wasn't responding to your post. I get what you are saying and yes I had spelled out what you said in my original post. I have the problem solved now. I just didn't understand the logic of the other person who was posting.

Thanks.

Oh, ok. Sometimes good to quote the post you are responding to. Very welcome.
 

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