Symmetric group

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Revision as of 22:37, 2 November 2008 by imported>David Lee Harden (created "Symmetric group" article and wrote about cycles and parity)
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Definition

If is a positive integer, the symmetric group on letters (often denoted ) is the group formed by all bijections from a set to itself (under the operation of function composition), where is an -element set. It is customary to take to be the set of integers from to , but this is not strictly necessary. The bijections which are elements of the symmetric group are called permutations.

Note that this means the identity of the group is the identity map on , which is the map sending each element of to itself.

The order of is .

Cycle Decomposition

Any permutation of a finite set can be written as a product of permutations called cycles. A cycle acting on fixes all the elements of S outside a nonempty subset of . On , the action of is as follows: for some indexing of the elements of , sends to for all and sends to . Then one writes

(Sometimes the commas are omitted.) If k > 1, such a is called a k-cycle.

For example, the permutation of the integers from 1 to 4 sending to for all can be denoted .

If is a one-element set, then its element is a fixed point of the permutation. Fixed points are often omitted from permutations written in cycle notation, since any cycling the elements of as discussed above would be the identity permutation.

Permutational Parity

A 2-cycle is called a transposition. A permutation of n points, when n > 1, is called even if it can be written as the product of an even number of transpositions and odd if it can be written as the product of an odd number of transpositions. The nontrivial fact about this terminology is that it is well-defined; that is, no permutation is both even and odd.

The even permutations in form a subgroup of . This subgroup is called the alternating group on n letters and denoted .

The order of is .