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Homework Statement
Classify the groups of order 12.
Homework Equations
None.
The Attempt at a Solution
The professor has worked this out up to a point. He proved a corollary that states:
"Let G be a group of order 12 whose 3-Sylow subgroups are not normal. Then G is isomorphic to A_4."
After the proof he states:
"Thus, the classification of groups of order 12 depends only on classifying the split extensions of Z_3 by groups of order 4."
OK, fine. So I know that split extensions are semidirect products, and that there are only 2 groups of order 4. So I need to compute the following:
D_4 \times_{\alpha} \mathbb{Z}_3
\mathbb{Z}_4 \times_{\beta} \mathbb{Z}_3
(sorry, don't know how to make the symbol for semidirect products)
Here's where the confusion begins. If I compare the semidirect products above with the definition of the same, then I see that I have to find the homomorphisms \alpha: \mathbb{Z}_3 \rightarrow Aut(D_4) and \beta: \mathbb{Z}_3 \rightarrow Aut(\mathbb{Z}_4).
The second one isn't so bad, but I would really like to turn the first one around so that the homomorphism comes out of D_4. That's because I've already done a homework exercise that gives me all of the homomorphisms out of D_{2n}.
So, first question: Is D_4 \times_{\alpha} \mathbb{Z}_3 for some \alpha isomorphic to \mathbb{Z}_3 \times_{\gamma} D_4 for some \gamma? In other words, can I arrange it so that I'm looking for homomorphisms from D_4 to Aut(\mathbb{Z}_3)?
Hope the question is clear.
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