What is the permutation representation of a cyclic group of order n?

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SUMMARY

The permutation representation of a cyclic group of order n, such as Z(3) or Z(4), involves defining how group elements act on a set of elements through permutations. For Z(3), the permutations are represented as (0)(1)(2), (012), and (021), while for Z(4), the permutations include (0)(1)(2)(3), (0123), and (02)(13). The discussion also covers the permutation representation of the symmetric group S3, which consists of all possible permutations of three elements, yielding six distinct permutations. The concept of permutation representation serves as a model for understanding group operations and their mappings.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of cyclic groups and their properties
  • Familiarity with permutation notation and cycle representation
  • Basic knowledge of group theory concepts
  • Ability to construct operation tables for groups
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  • Study the properties of symmetric groups, specifically S4 and its permutations
  • Learn about the operation tables for various groups, including the Klein 4-group
  • Explore the concept of group actions and their implications in group theory
  • Investigate the relationship between permutation representations and group homomorphisms
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Mathematicians, students of abstract algebra, and anyone interested in group theory and its applications in permutations and combinatorial structures.

apalmer3
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Homework Statement



a. Find the permutation representation of a cyclic group of order n.
b. Let G be the group S3. Find the permutation representation of S3.

Homework Equations



n/a

The Attempt at a Solution



I unfortunately have not been able to come up with a solution. I really don't understand what it means by "permutation representation". If someone can give me a definition or explanation, I think I can go from there.

Thank you.
 
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I would like it better if they said 'find A permutation representation' rather than 'THE permutation representation'. Maybe it will help to just do an example. Take the cyclic group Z(3). It has three elements {0,1,2}. An element of the group, g, acts on an element x by taking x -> gx. So a representation of 0 is the permutation (0)(1)(2) (the identity permutation). 1 becomes (012) and 2 becomes (021). The easiest way to represent S(3) is by ALL possible permutations on {0,1,2}. The previous representation of Z(3) represents it as a subgroup of S(3). Now, you could represent S(3) by a group of permutations on the six elements that compose S(3) just as we did for Z(3). But that's much harder to write down. That's why I wish they had said 'A permutation representation'. A group can have many permutation representations. Some are more economical than others. Does that make any sense at all?
 
Hmm... I think I kind of understand. Then again, I'm also really tired, so who knows?

So, for S3, we'd have (1)(2)(3),(12)(3),(13)(2),(1)(23),(123) ?

Or am I totally off?
 
I'm tired too. But there are six elements in S3. What about (132)? That doesn't make you 'totally off'.
 
Maybe I'm skipping something. A 'representation' of a group is a 'model' of it. I can compute the sum of two elements in Z(3) by computing the product of the permutations that 'represent' them. Same for S(3).
 
Okay, so I only missed one? And we get our 3-cycles through multiplying the 2-cycles?

And as far as the cyclic group of order n... How is that specifically different from Sn?

Thank you so much for all of your help!
 
Sorry, I think I'm really confused, after reading the post directly before my previous post. I swear I'm trying to understand.

Thank you.
 
It's not really about cycles. Here's Z(4). (0)(1)(2)(3),(0123),(02)(13),(0321). That's making it look hard. But there are ways to represent permutations without using cycles. Just name the base set and give a rule for what maps into what to describe a permutation.
 
Write down the "operation table" for the group. Let's say that "e" is the identity and you have elements a, b, etc. Notice that multiplying a by each member of the group gives the row labled "a" on your operation table. Each of the members of the group appears once and only once on that row. That is, the row is a "permutation" of the top row just listing the elements of the group. If you replace e, a, b, etc. with 0, 1, 2, etc. each row is a permutation of {0,1,2, ...}. That is the permutation representation.

Take, for example, the Klein 4-group. Its operation table is
__e a b c
e e a b c
a a e c b
b b c e a
c c b a e

Now replace those with 0, 1, 2, 3 and the table is
__0 1 2 3
0 0 1 2 3
1 1 0 3 2
2 2 3 0 1
3 3 2 1 0
That is, 0, the identity, takes {0, 1, 2, 3} to {0, 1, 2, 3}, the identity permutation.
1 takes {0, 1, 2, 3} to {1, 0, 3, 2}, the permutation (0 1)(2 3)
2 takes {0, 1, 2, 3} to {2, 3, 0, 1}, the permutation (0 2)(1 3)
3 takes {0, 1, 2, 3} to {3, 2, 1, 0}, the permutation (0 3)(1 2).

Those four permutations (out of 4!= 24 possible permutations of {0, 1, 2, 3}) are the permutation representations of the elements of the Klein 4-group.
 
  • #10
Okay, now that it's morning, this makes much more sense. Thanks for the clarification HallsofIvy.

I guess now, my only question is, does a 4 element permutation have a 4 element permutation representation or a 4!=24 element permutation?

Thank you so much!
 
  • #11
apalmer3 said:
Okay, now that it's morning, this makes much more sense. Thanks for the clarification HallsofIvy.

I guess now, my only question is, does a 4 element permutation have a 4 element permutation representation or a 4!=24 element permutation?

Thank you so much!

Both. You can represent S(4) as the permutations on four arbitrary elements or you can represent it as permutations of the 24 group elements. I think the former is easier.
 

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