Inner automorphism
Template:Short description In abstract algebra, an inner automorphism is an automorphism of a group, ring, or algebra given by the conjugation action of a fixed element, called the conjugating element. They can be realized via operations from within the group itself, hence the adjective "inner". These inner automorphisms form a subgroup of the automorphism group, and the quotient of the automorphism group by this subgroup is defined as the outer automorphism group.
Definition
If Template:Mvar is a group and Template:Mvar is an element of Template:Mvar (alternatively, if Template:Mvar is a ring, and Template:Mvar is a unit), then the function
is called (right) conjugation by Template:Mvar (see also conjugacy class). This function is an endomorphism of Template:Mvar: for all
where the second equality is given by the insertion of the identity between and Furthermore, it has a left and right inverse, namely Thus, is both an monomorphism and epimorphism, and so an isomorphism of Template:Mvar with itself, i.e. an automorphism. An inner automorphism is any automorphism that arises from conjugation.[1]

When discussing right conjugation, the expression is often denoted exponentially by This notation is used because composition of conjugations satisfies the identity: for all This shows that right conjugation gives a right action of Template:Mvar on itself.
A common example is as follows:[2][3]

Describe a homomorphism for which the image, , is a normal subgroup of inner automorphisms of a group ; alternatively, describe a natural homomorphism of which the kernel of is the center of (all for which conjugating by them returns the trivial automorphism), in other words, . There is always a natural homomorphism , which associates to every an (inner) automorphism in . Put identically, .
Let as defined above. This requires demonstrating that (1) is a homomorphism, (2) is also a bijection, (3) is a homomorphism.
- The condition for bijectivity may be verified by simply presenting an inverse such that we can return to from . In this case it is conjugation by denoted as .
- and
Inner and outer automorphism groups
The composition of two inner automorphisms is again an inner automorphism, and with this operation, the collection of all inner automorphisms of Template:Mvar is a group, the inner automorphism group of Template:Mvar denoted Template:Math.
Template:Math is a normal subgroup of the full automorphism group Template:Math of Template:Mvar. The outer automorphism group, Template:Math is the quotient group
The outer automorphism group measures, in a sense, how many automorphisms of Template:Mvar are not inner. Every non-inner automorphism yields a non-trivial element of Template:Math, but different non-inner automorphisms may yield the same element of Template:Math.
Saying that conjugation of Template:Mvar by Template:Mvar leaves Template:Mvar unchanged is equivalent to saying that Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar commute:
Therefore the existence and number of inner automorphisms that are not the identity mapping is a kind of measure of the failure of the commutative law in the group (or ring).
An automorphism of a group Template:Mvar is inner if and only if it extends to every group containing Template:Mvar.[4]
By associating the element Template:Math with the inner automorphism Template:Math in Template:Math as above, one obtains an isomorphism between the quotient group Template:Math (where Template:Math is the center of Template:Mvar) and the inner automorphism group:
This is a consequence of the first isomorphism theorem, because Template:Math is precisely the set of those elements of Template:Mvar that give the identity mapping as corresponding inner automorphism (conjugation changes nothing).
Non-inner automorphisms of finite Template:Mvar-groups
A result of Wolfgang Gaschütz says that if Template:Mvar is a finite non-abelian [[p-group|Template:Mvar-group]], then Template:Mvar has an automorphism of Template:Mvar-power order which is not inner.
It is an open problem whether every non-abelian Template:Mvar-group Template:Mvar has an automorphism of order Template:Mvar. The latter question has positive answer whenever Template:Mvar has one of the following conditions:
- Template:Mvar is nilpotent of class 2
- Template:Mvar is a [[regular p-group|regular Template:Mvar-group]]
- Template:Math is a [[powerful p-group|powerful Template:Mvar-group]]
- The centralizer in Template:Mvar, Template:Math, of the center, Template:Mvar, of the Frattini subgroup, Template:Math, of Template:Mvar, Template:Math, is not equal to Template:Math
Types of groups
The inner automorphism group of a group Template:Mvar, Template:Math, is trivial (i.e., consists only of the identity element) if and only if Template:Mvar is abelian.
The group Template:Math is cyclic only when it is trivial.
At the opposite end of the spectrum, the inner automorphisms may exhaust the entire automorphism group; a group whose automorphisms are all inner and whose center is trivial is called complete. This is the case for all of the symmetric groups on Template:Mvar elements when Template:Mvar is not 2 or 6. When Template:Math, the symmetric group has a unique non-trivial class of non-inner automorphisms, and when Template:Math, the symmetric group, despite having no non-inner automorphisms, is abelian, giving a non-trivial center, disqualifying it from being complete.
If the inner automorphism group of a perfect group Template:Mvar is simple, then Template:Mvar is called quasisimple.
Lie algebra case
An automorphism of a Lie algebra Template:Math is called an inner automorphism if it is of the form Template:Math, where Template:Math is the adjoint map and Template:Mvar is an element of a Lie group whose Lie algebra is Template:Math. The notion of inner automorphism for Lie algebras is compatible with the notion for groups in the sense that an inner automorphism of a Lie group induces a unique inner automorphism of the corresponding Lie algebra.
Extension
If Template:Mvar is the group of units of a ring, Template:Mvar, then an inner automorphism on Template:Mvar can be extended to a mapping on the [[projective line over a ring|projective line over Template:Mvar]] by the group of units of the matrix ring, Template:Math. In particular, the inner automorphisms of the classical groups can be extended in that way.