Proving an Abelian Group with 2 Elements of Order 2 has a Subgroup of Order 4

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Homework Statement


Prove that an abelian group with two elements of order 2 must have a subgroup of order 4


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The Attempt at a Solution


Let G be an abelian group ==> for every a,b that belong to G ab=ba.
Let a,b have order 2 ==> a^2 =e and b^2 = e. Since a belongs to G aa=a^2 belongs to G. Since b belongs to G bb= b^2 belongs to G. IE four elements ie order of a subgroup can be four.
 
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It's not enough to say there are four elements in G to prove that there is a subgroup of order 4. (Plus since a2=b2=e, you've only shown there are three elements in G.) Think about what "subgroup of order 4" means. What do you need to show to say that a subset of G is a subgroup of G and that its order is 4?
 
Um, what four elements have you singled out? I don't see how saying a^2 belongs to G and b^2 belongs to G helps, since we already know that both are equal to e, which obviously belongs to G since G is a group (and that's a single element).
 
vela said:
It's not enough to say there are four elements in G to prove that there is a subgroup of order 4. (Plus since a2=b2=e, you've only shown there are three elements in G.) Think about what "subgroup of order 4" means. What do you need to show to say that a subset of G is a subgroup of G and that its order is 4?

Well inorder to show something is a subgroup you have to show that it is closed under the operation and that if a belongs to the subgroup then a^-1 (inverse of a) belongs to the subgroup. but what i can't figure out is how to tie that into proving the sungroup has four elements in it. well wait. if a belongs to the subgroup, a inverse should belong there as well. the same goes for b and b inverse. so i guess that's four elements? atleast?
 
Again, you have to be careful here. If a^2 = e, what does this tell you about a^-1 (Hint: multiply both sides of the equation by a^-1)?
 
Suppose H is a subgroup that includes a and b. What other elements have to be in H?
 
snipez90 said:
Again, you have to be careful here. If a^2 = e, what does this tell you about a^-1 (Hint: multiply both sides of the equation by a^-1)?

that means a= a inverse which is not true
 
vela said:
Suppose H is a subgroup that includes a and b. What other elements have to be in H?

ab, a inverse and b inverse
 
188818881888 said:
that means a= a inverse which is not true
Why not?
 
  • #10
vela said:
Why not?

because in a group a(a^-1) must equal e. but if a^-1=a then a^2=e. ok so a should equal a^-1?
 
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