Transitively normal subgroup: Difference between revisions
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imported>Sammi Brie Adding local short description: "Property of a subgroup in mathematics", overriding Wikidata description "subgroup such that every normal subgroup of it is also normal in the whole group" |
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Latest revision as of 20:38, 7 April 2024
Template:Short description Template:More citations needed In mathematics, in the field of group theory, a subgroup of a group is said to be transitively normal in the group if every normal subgroup of the subgroup is also normal in the whole group. In symbols, is a transitively normal subgroup of if for every normal in , we have that is normal in .[1]
An alternate way to characterize these subgroups is: every normal subgroup preserving automorphism of the whole group must restrict to a normal subgroup preserving automorphism of the subgroup.
Here are some facts about transitively normal subgroups:
- Every normal subgroup of a transitively normal subgroup is normal.
- Every direct factor, or more generally, every central factor is transitively normal. Thus, every central subgroup is transitively normal.
- A transitively normal subgroup of a transitively normal subgroup is transitively normal.
- A transitively normal subgroup is normal.