Group theory -- show H is a subgroup of O(2)

Click For Summary

Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around group theory, specifically examining whether a set H, defined by certain rotation and reflection matrices in O(2), forms a subgroup. The original poster presents a set of matrices representing rotations and reflections and seeks to understand the implications of their calculations in the context of subgroup properties.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the calculations of matrix products involving rotations and reflections, questioning their significance and geometric interpretations. There is an exploration of subgroup criteria, including closure under multiplication and the existence of inverses within the set H. Some participants express uncertainty about the relationship between rotations and reflections, particularly regarding their effects on orientation and the implications for subgroup status.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with participants providing guidance on subgroup properties and the necessary conditions for H to be a subgroup of O(2). There is a recognition of the need to demonstrate closure and the inclusion of inverses, as well as an ongoing exploration of the geometric interpretations of the matrices involved.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the specific definitions of angles in H as being of the form ##\frac{2q\pi}{m}##, which may influence the calculations and interpretations of the subgroup properties. There is also mention of the potential confusion regarding the distinction between groups and subgroups.

Kara386
Messages
204
Reaction score
2

Homework Statement


Let ##R(\theta) = \left( \begin{array}{cc}
\cos(\theta) & -\sin(\theta)\\
\sin(\theta)& \cos(\theta)\\ \end{array} \right) \in O(2)## represent a rotation through angle ##\theta##, and

##X(\theta) = \left( \begin{array}{cc}
\cos(\theta) & \sin(\theta)\\
\sin(\theta)& -\cos(\theta)\\ \end{array} \right) \in O(2)## represent reflection around ##\frac{\theta}{2}##. Let m be a positive integer and H be the set such that ##H = \{R(\frac{2q\pi}{m}), X(\frac{2q\pi}{m}) | q = 0, 1, 2..., m-1\}##.

Calculate ##R(\theta)R(\phi)##, ##R(\theta)X(\phi)## and ##X(\theta)X(\phi)##, express answers in terms of R and X. Show H forms a subgroup of ##O(2)##.

Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


##R(\theta) R(\phi) =
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
\cos(\theta+\phi) & -\sin(\theta+\phi)\\
\sin(\theta+\phi)& \cos(\theta+\phi)\\ \end{array} \right) = R(\theta + \phi)##

##R(\theta) X(\phi) =
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
\cos(\theta+\phi) & \sin(\theta+\phi)\\
\sin(\theta+\phi)& -\cos(\theta+\phi)\\ \end{array} \right) = X(\theta + \phi)##

##R(\theta) X(\phi) = R(\theta - \phi)##

I'm not really sure of the significance of these calculations, or if there is one. Does this have a geometric interpretation? I've been told that the set ##O(2)## is somehow related to the permutation of 3 points but haven't been able to find out why.
To show it's a subgroup of O(2) I have to show ##R \times X \in O(2)## where ##\times## is matrix multiplication and ##a^{-1} \in H##. Do I need to use the argument ##\frac{2q\pi}{m}## in these calculations? So for example let ##a = R(\frac{2q\pi}{m})##. Any help is very much appreciated, thank you! :)

I've gone ahead and attempted the problem with the argument above, and set a = R, b = X. I've already calculated RX to be ##= R(\theta - \phi)## above: ## =
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
\cos(0) & \sin(0)\\
\sin(0)& -\cos(0)\\ \end{array} \right)
=
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)##
I wasn't really expecting to get the identity matrix, I suppose I show it's part of O(2) by showing ##A^T A = I ## and of course, it is a real 2x2 matrix.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
To prove that it is a subgroup, you have to show that it is a subset of O(2) that satisfies all the group axioms. That it is a subset of O(2) should be clear so you need to show that the group axioms are satisfied.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
Orodruin said:
To prove that it is a subgroup, you have to show that it is a subset of O(2) that satisfies all the group axioms. That it is a subset of O(2) should be clear so you need to show that the group axioms are satisfied.
By multiplying the two elements and showing they are part of ##O(2)## I'm not demonstrating closure then? I should actually show they are part of ##H##? Matrix multiplication is associative, the identity is ##
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)## and since ##RX = I ## the implication is that ## R = X^{-1}## and ##X = R^{-1}##, so the inverses both exist and are part of H. Does this demonstrate that the subset is a subgroup? Or group (not sure of the difference actually)? It certainly satisfies group axioms, so that makes it a subgroup?
 
Kara386 said:
By multiplying the two elements and showing they are part of ##O(2)## I'm not demonstrating closure then?
This is only the closure of ##O(2)##, not of ##H##.
I should actually show they are part of ##H##?
Yes.
Matrix multiplication is associative, the identity is ##
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)## and since ##RX = I ## the implication is that ## R = X^{-1}## and ##X = R^{-1}##, so the inverses both exist and are part of H. Does this demonstrate that the subset is a subgroup?
Yes. But you also have to show ##R(\theta) \cdot X(\phi) \in H\, , \,R(\theta) \cdot R(\phi) \in H\; , \;X(\theta) \cdot X(\phi) \in H## and ##X(\phi) \cdot R(\theta) \in H## for all ##\theta, \phi##.
Or group (not sure of the difference actually)? It certainly satisfies group axioms, so that makes it a subgroup?
For a subgroup, you need to show ##a\cdot b^{-1} \in H## for all ##a\, , \,b \in H##. Associativity is inherited. (Of course you can as well show ##a\cdot b \in H\, , \,a^{-1} \in H\; , \;1 \in H## separately but ##a\cdot b^{-1} \in H## does it all in one step.) However, it has to be shown for all ##a,b \in H##, which means all pairs ## (a,b) \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}^2## in this case.

I'm not sure about the connection to permutations you mentioned. (There is one for its tangent space but I don't know about the group itself. On the other hand it's full of symmetries as you have already calculated above.)
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
Kara386 said:
I should actually show they are part of HHH?
Yes. If the subset is not closed under the multiplication, it is not a group of its own.

Kara386 said:
By multiplying the two elements and showing they are part of ##O(2)## I'm not demonstrating closure then? I should actually show they are part of ##H##? Matrix multiplication is associative, the identity is ##
\left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)## and since ##RX = I ## the implication is that ## R = X^{-1}## and ##X = R^{-1}##, so the inverses both exist and are part of H. Does this demonstrate that the subset is a subgroup? Or group (not sure of the difference actually)? It certainly satisfies group axioms, so that makes it a subgroup?
What are your R and X here? The inverse of a rotation is not a reflection.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
Orodruin said:
Yes. If the subset is not closed under the multiplication, it is not a group of its own.What are your R and X here? The inverse of a rotation is not a reflection.
Couldn't rotation through ##\theta## undo a reflection through ##\frac{\theta}{2}## in a few cases? I'm not at all sure how this whole thing relates to geometry. What exactly is being rotated or reflected? Or do these matrices just result in rotation or reflection when applied to other matrices or vectors?
 
Look in a mirror. Can you reverse the change of left and right by a rotation? Reflections change the orientation, rotations don't. Or in terms of the matrix group here: one has determinant ##-1##, the other on ##1##.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
Kara386 said:
Couldn't rotation through ##\theta## undo a reflection through ##\frac{\theta}{2}## in a few cases? I'm not at all sure how this whole thing relates to geometry. What exactly is being rotated or reflected? Or do these matrices just result in rotation or reflection when applied to other matrices or vectors?
Try taking the determinant of ##RX## ... The inverse of a rotation by ##\theta## is a rotation by ##-\theta## (or equivalently, by ##2\pi-\theta##).
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
So ##RX## shouldn't actually be equal to ##I## then? I've probably made a mistake, I'll check. I suppose I was thinking of highly symmetric things like circles, which aren't really changed by these things, when I say rotation could undo reflection, but only in some few cases.
 
  • #10
fresh_42 said:
This is only the closure of ##O(2)##, not of ##H##.
For a subgroup, you need to show ##a\cdot b^{-1} \in H## for all ##a\, , \,b \in H##. Associativity is inherited. (Of course you can as well show ##a\cdot b \in H\, , \,a^{-1} \in H\; , \;1 \in H## separately but ##a\cdot b^{-1} \in H## does it all in one step.) However, it has to be shown for all ##a,b \in H##, which means all pairs ## (a,b) \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}^2## in this case.
But aren't both theta and phi defined in H as being ##\frac{2q\pi}{m}##? I'd shown that ##R(\theta)X(\phi) = R(\theta - \phi)##, so ##R(\frac{2q\pi}{m})X(\frac{2q\pi}{m}) = R(\frac{2q\pi}{m}- \frac{2q\pi}{m}) = R(0)##, which I thought would be
##R(0) = \left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)##
I'm also not completely sure what that last bit of notation means: ## (a,b) \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}^2##
Why is this bracket squared?
 
  • #11
Kara386 said:
But aren't both theta and phi defined in H as being ##\frac{2q\pi}{m}##?
So? This doesn't change my argument, only the amount of possible angles.
I'd shown that ##R(\theta)X(\phi) = R(\theta - \phi)##, so ##R(\frac{2q\pi}{m})X(\frac{2q\pi}{m}) = R(\frac{2q\pi}{m}- \frac{2q\pi}{m}) = R(0)##, which I thought would be
##R(0) = \left( \begin{array}{cc}
1& 0\\
0 & 1\\ \end{array} \right)##
There might be a mistake in here. Check the determinants. And, yes, an equation like this would do the job. But you still have to cover the possibility of different angles ##\frac{2q\pi}{m}## and ##\frac{2p\pi}{m}## in ##R(\frac{2q\pi}{m})## and ##X(\frac{2p\pi}{m})##. And what happens with ##R \cdot R' \, , \, X \cdot X' \, , \, X\cdot R\,##? The latter because ##H## is eventually not Abelian. (You haven't checked this.)
I'm also not completely sure what that last bit of notation means: ## (a,b) \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}^2##
Why is this bracket squared?
It means ## (a,b) \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\} \times \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\} = \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}^2## or ##a,b \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\}## or ##(a \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\} ## and ## b \in \{R(\theta),X(\phi)\})##. These are significantly more cases as only ##RX##.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: Kara386
  • #12
fresh_42 said:
So? This doesn't change my argument, only the amount of possible angles.

Ah. I hadn't realized the angles could be different, I assumed it would always be ##\theta = \phi = \frac{2q\pi}{m}##, but I see why that's not the case. A shame, it made life that much easier. So what I've worked out is only for the case of ##\theta = \phi##. Back to the drawing board!

I'll try that again and see where I get to. Your time and help is much appreciated, thank you! :)
 

Similar threads

Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K