Descendant tree (group theory)

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In mathematics, specifically group theory, a descendant tree is a hierarchical structure that visualizes parent-descendant relations between isomorphism classes of finite groups of prime power order pn, for a fixed prime number p and varying integer exponents n0. Such groups are briefly called finite p-groups. The vertices of a descendant tree are isomorphism classes of finite p-groups.

Additionally to their order pn, finite p-groups have two further related invariants, the nilpotency class c and the coclass r=nc. It turned out that descendant trees of a particular kind, the so-called pruned coclass trees whose infinitely many vertices share a common coclass r, reveal a repeating finite pattern. These two crucial properties of finiteness and periodicity admit a characterization of all members of the tree by finitely many parametrized presentations. Consequently, descendant trees play a fundamental role in the classification of finite p-groups. By means of kernels and targets of Artin transfer homomorphisms, descendant trees can be endowed with additional structure.

An important question is how the descendant tree 𝒯(R) can actually be constructed for an assigned starting group which is taken as the root R of the tree. The p-group generation algorithm is a recursive process for constructing the descendant tree of a given finite p-group playing the role of the tree root. This algorithm is implemented in the computational algebra systems GAP and Magma.

Definitions and terminology

According to M. F. Newman,[1] there exist several distinct definitions of the parent π(G) of a finite p-group G. The common principle is to form the quotient π(G)=G/N of G by a suitable normal subgroup NG which can be either

Template:EquationNote

  1. the centre N=ζ1(G) of G, whence π(G)=G/ζ1(G) is called the central quotient of G, or
  2. the last non-trivial term N=γc(G) of the lower central series of G, where c denotes the nilpotency class of G, or
  3. the last non-trivial term N=Pc1(G) of the lower exponent-p central series of G, where c denotes the exponent-p class of G, or
  4. the last non-trivial term N=G(d1) of the derived series of G, where d denotes the derived length of G.

In each case, G is called an immediate descendant of π(G) and a directed edge of the tree is defined either by Gπ(G) in the direction of the canonical projection π:Gπ(G) onto the quotient π(G)=G/N or by π(G)G in the opposite direction, which is more usual for descendant trees. The former convention is adopted by C. R. Leedham-Green and M. F. Newman,[2] by M. du Sautoy and D. Segal,[3] by C. R. Leedham-Green and S. McKay,[4] and by B. Eick, C. R. Leedham-Green, M. F. Newman and E. A. O'Brien.[5] The latter definition is used by M. F. Newman,[1] by M. F. Newman and E. A. O'Brien,[6] by M. du Sautoy,[7] and by B. Eick and C. R. Leedham-Green.[8]

In the following, the direction of the canonical projections is selected for all edges. Then, more generally, a vertex R is a descendant of a vertex P, and P is an ancestor of R, if either R is equal to P or there is a path

(1)R=Q0Q1Qm1Qm=P, with m1,

of directed edges from R to P. The vertices forming the path necessarily coincide with the iterated parents Qj=πj(R) of R, with 0jm:

(2)R=π0(R)π1(R)πm1(R)πm(R)=P, with m1,

In the most important special case (P2) of parents defined as last non-trivial lower central quotients, they can also be viewed as the successive quotients R/γc+1j(R) of class cj of R when the nilpotency class of R is given by cm:

(3)RR/γc+1(R)R/γc(R)R/γc+2m(R)R/γc+1m(R)P, with cm1.

Generally, the descendant tree 𝒯(G) of a vertex G is the subtree of all descendants of G, starting at the root G. The maximal possible descendant tree 𝒯(1) of the trivial group 1 contains all finite p-groups and is somewhat exceptional, since, for any parent definition (P1–P4), the trivial group 1 has infinitely many abelian p-groups as its immediate descendants. The parent definitions (P2–P3) have the advantage that any non-trivial finite p-group (of order divisible by p) possesses only finitely many immediate descendants.

Pro-p groups and coclass trees

For a sound understanding of coclass trees as a particular instance of descendant trees, it is necessary to summarize some facts concerning infinite topological pro-p groups. The members γj(S), with j1, of the lower central series of a pro-p group S are closed (and open) subgroups of finite index, and therefore the corresponding quotients S/γj(S) are finite p-groups. The pro-p group S is said to be of coclass cc(S)=r when the limit r=limjcc(S/γj(S)) of the coclass of the successive quotients exists and is finite. An infinite pro-p group S of coclass r is a p-adic pre-space group ,[5] since it has a normal subgroup T, the translation group, which is a free module over the ring β„€p of p-adic integers of uniquely determined rank d, the dimension, such that the quotient P=S/T is a finite p-group, the point group, which acts on T uniserially. The dimension is given by

(4)d=(p1)ps, with some 0s<r.

A central finiteness result for infinite pro-p groups of coclass r is provided by the so-called Theorem D, which is one of the five Coclass Theorems proved in 1994 independently by A. Shalev [9] and by C. R. Leedham-Green ,[10] and conjectured in 1980 already by C. R. Leedham-Green and M. F. Newman.[2] Theorem D asserts that there are only finitely many isomorphism classes of infinite pro-p groups of coclass r, for any fixed prime p and any fixed non-negative integer r. As a consequence, if S is an infinite pro-p group of coclass r, then there exists a minimal integer i1 such that the following three conditions are satisfied for any integer ji.

Template:EquationNote

  1. cc(S/γj(S))=r,
  2. S/γj(S) is not a lower central quotient of any infinite pro-p group of coclass r which is not isomorphic to S,
  3. γj/γj+1(S) is cyclic of order p.

The descendant tree 𝒯(R), with respect to the parent definition (P2), of the root R=S/γi(S) with minimal i is called the coclass tree 𝒯(S) of S and its unique maximal infinite (reverse-directed) path

(5)R=S/γi(S)S/γi+1(S)S/γi+2(S)

is called the mainline (or trunk) of the tree.

treediagram
Figure 1: A descendant tree. The branches B(2),B(4) have depth 0, and B(5),B(7), resp. B(6),B(8), are isomorphic as trees.

Tree diagram

Further terminology, used in diagrams visualizing finite parts of descendant trees, is explained in Figure 1 by means of an artificial abstract tree. On the left hand side, a level indicates the basic top-down design of a descendant tree. For concrete trees, such as those in Figure 2, resp. Figure 3, etc., the level is usually replaced by a scale of orders increasing from the top to the bottom. A vertex is capable (or extendable) if it has at least one immediate descendant, otherwise it is terminal (or a leaf). Vertices sharing a common parent are called siblings.

If the descendant tree is a coclass tree 𝒯(R) with root R=R0 and with mainline vertices (Rn)n0 labelled according to the level n, then the finite subtree defined as the difference set

(6)ℬ(n)=𝒯(Rn)𝒯(Rn+1)

is called the nth branch (or twig) of the tree or also the branch ℬ(Rn) with root Rn, for any n0. The depth of a branch is the maximal length of the paths connecting its vertices with its root. Figure 1 shows an artificial abstract coclass tree whose branches ℬ(2) and ℬ(4) both have depth 0, and the branches ℬ(5)ℬ(7) and ℬ(6)ℬ(8) are pairwise isomorphic as graphs. If all vertices of depth bigger than a given integer k0 are removed from the branch ℬ(n), then we obtain the depth-k pruned branch ℬk(n). Correspondingly, the depth-k pruned coclass tree 𝒯k(R), resp. the entire coclass tree 𝒯(R), consists of the infinite sequence of its pruned branches (ℬk(n))n0, resp. branches (ℬ(n))n0, connected by the mainline, whose vertices Rn are called infinitely capable.

Virtual periodicity

The periodicity of branches of depth-pruned coclass trees has been proved with analytic methods using zeta functions [3] of groups by M. du Sautoy ,[7] and with algebraic techniques using cohomology groups by B. Eick and C. R. Leedham-Green .[8] The former methods admit the qualitative insight of ultimate virtual periodicity, the latter techniques determine the quantitative structure.

Theorem. For any infinite pro-p group S of coclass r1 and dimension d, and for any given depth k1, there exists an effective minimal lower bound f(k)1, where periodicity of length d of pruned branches of the coclass tree 𝒯(S) sets in, that is, there exist graph isomorphisms

(7)ℬk(n+d)ℬk(n) for all nf(k).

For the proof, click show on the right hand side.

Template:Hidden begin The graph isomorphisms of depth-k pruned branches with roots of sufficiently large order nf(k) are derived with cohomological methods in Theorem 6, p. 277 and Theorem 9, p. 278 by Eick and Leedham-Green [8] and the effective lower bound f(k) for the branch root orders is established in Theorem 29, p. 287, of this article. Template:Hidden end

These central results can be expressed ostensively: When we look at a coclass tree through a pair of blinkers and ignore a finite number of pre-periodic branches at the top, then we shall see a repeating finite pattern (ultimate periodicity). However, if we take wider blinkers the pre-periodic initial section may become longer (virtual periodicity).

The vertex P=Rf(k) is called the periodic root of the pruned coclass tree, for a fixed value of the depth k. See Figure 1.

Multifurcation and coclass graphs

Assume that parents of finite p-groups are defined as last non-trivial lower central quotients (P2). For a p-group G of coclass cc(G)=r, we can distinguish its (entire) descendant tree 𝒯(G) and its coclass-r descendant tree 𝒯r(G), that is the subtree consisting of descendants of coclass r only. The group G is called coclass-settled if 𝒯(G)=𝒯r(G), i.e., if there are no descendants of G with bigger coclass than r.

The nuclear rank ν(G) of G in the theory of the p-group generation algorithm by M. F. Newman [11] and E. A. O'Brien [12] provides the following criteria.

Template:EquationNote

  1. G is terminal, and thus trivially coclass-settled, if and only if ν(G)=0.
  2. If ν(G)=1, then G is capable, but it remains unknown whether G is coclass-settled.
  3. If ν(G)=m2, then G is capable and definitely not coclass-settled.

In the last case, a more precise assertion is possible: If G has coclass r and nuclear rank ν(G)=m2, then it gives rise to an m-fold multifurcation into a regular coclass-r descendant tree 𝒯r(G) and m1 irregular descendant graphs 𝒯r+j(G) of coclass r+j, for 1jm1. Consequently, the descendant tree of G is the disjoint union

(8)𝒯(G)=Λ™j=0m1𝒯r+j(G).

Multifurcation is correlated with different orders of the last non-trivial lower central of immediate descendants. Since the nilpotency class increases exactly by a unit, c=cl(Q)=cl(P)+1, from a parent P=Q/γc(Q)=π(Q) to any immediate descendant Q, the coclass remains stable, r=cc(Q)=cc(P), if the last non-trivial lower central is cyclic of order |γc(Q)|=p, since then the exponent of the order also increases exactly by a unit, |Q|=p|P| . In this case, Q is a regular immediate descendant with directed edge PQ of step size 1, as usual. However, the coclass increases by m1, if |γc(Q)|=pm with m2. Then Q is called an irregular immediate descendant with directed edge PQ of step size m.

If the condition of step size 1 is imposed on all directed edges, then the maximal descendant tree 𝒯(1) of the trivial group 1 splits into a countably infinite disjoint union

(9)𝒯(1)=Λ™r=0𝒒(p,r)

of directed coclass graphs 𝒒(p,r), which are rather forests than trees. More precisely, the above-mentioned Coclass Theorems imply that

(10)𝒒(p,r)=(Λ™i𝒯(Si))˙𝒒0(p,r)

is the disjoint union of finitely many coclass trees 𝒯(Si) of pairwise non-isomorphic infinite pro-p groups Si of coclass r (Theorem D) and a finite subgraph 𝒒0(p,r) of sporadic groups lying outside of any coclass tree.

Identifiers

The SmallGroups Library identifiers of finite groups, in particular of finite p-groups, given in the form

 order, counting number 

in the following concrete examples of descendant trees, are due to H. U. Besche, B. Eick and E. A. O'Brien .[13] [14] When the group orders are given in a scale on the left hand side, as in Figure 2 and Figure 3, the identifiers are briefly denoted by

 counting number .

Depending on the prime p, there is an upper bound on the order of groups for which a SmallGroup identifier exists, e.g. 512=29 for p=2, and 6561=38 for p=3. For groups of bigger orders, a notation with generalized identifiers resembling the descendant structure is employed. A regular immediate descendant, connected by an edge of step size 1 with its parent P, is denoted by

P#1;counting number,

and an irregular immediate descendant, connected by an edge of step size s2 with its parent P, is denoted by

P#s;counting number.

The implementations of the p-group generation algorithm in the computational algebra systems GAP and Magma use these generalized identifiers, which go back to J. A. Ascione in 1979 .[15]

Concrete examples of trees

In all examples, the underlying parent definition (P2) corresponds to the usual lower central series. Occasional differences to the parent definition (P3) with respect to the lower exponent-p central series are pointed out.

Coclass 0

The coclass graph

(11)𝒒(p,0)=𝒒0(p,0)

of finite p-groups of coclass 0 does not contain any coclass tree and thus exclusively consists of sporadic groups, namely the trivial group 1 and the cyclic group Cp of order p, which is a leaf (however, it is capable with respect to the lower exponent-p central series). For p=2 the SmallGroup identifier of Cp is 2,1, for p=3 it is 3,1.

2-groups
Figure 2: The coclass graph of finite 2-groups with coclass 1

Coclass 1

The coclass graph

(12)𝒒(p,1)=𝒯1(R)˙𝒒0(p,1)

of finite p-groups of coclass 1, also called of maximal class, consists of the unique coclass tree 𝒯1(R) with root R=Cp×Cp, the elementary abelian p-group of rank 2, and a single isolated vertex (a terminal orphan without proper parent in the same coclass graph, since the directed edge to the trivial group 1 has step size 2), the cyclic group Cp2 of order p2 in the sporadic part 𝒒0(p,1) (however, this group is capable with respect to the lower exponent-p central series). The tree 𝒯1(R)=𝒯1(S1) is the coclass tree of the unique infinite pro-p group S1 of coclass 1.

For p=2, resp. p=3, the SmallGroup identifier of the root R is 4,2, resp. 9,2, and a tree diagram of the coclass graph from branch ℬ(2) down to branch ℬ(7) (counted with respect to the p-logarithm of the order of the branch root) is drawn in Figure 2, resp. Figure 3, where all groups of order at least p3 are metabelian, that is non-abelian with derived length 2 (vertices represented by black discs in contrast to contour squares indicating abelian groups). In Figure 3, smaller black discs denote metabelian 3-groups where even the maximal subgroups are non-abelian, a feature which does not occur for the metabelian 2-groups in Figure 2, since they all possess an abelian subgroup of index p (usually exactly one). The coclass tree of 𝒒(2,1), resp. 𝒒(3,1), has periodic root 8,3 and periodicity of length 1 starting with branch ℬ(3), resp. periodic root 81,9 and periodicity of length 2 setting in with branch ℬ(4). Both trees have branches of bounded depth 1, so their virtual periodicity is in fact a strict periodicity.

However, the coclass tree of 𝒒(p,1) with p5 has unbounded depth and contains non-metabelian groups, and the coclass tree of 𝒒(p,1) with p7 has even unbounded width, that is, the number of descendants of a fixed order increases indefinitely with growing order .[16]

With the aid of kernels and targets of Artin transfers, the diagrams in Figure 2 and Figure 3 can be endowed with additional information and redrawn as structured descendant trees.

The concrete examples 𝒒(2,1) and 𝒒(3,1) of coclass graphs provide an opportunity to give a parametrized polycyclic power-commutator presentation [17] for the complete coclass tree 𝒯1(R)𝒒(p,1), p{2,3}, mentioned in the lead section as a benefit of the descendant tree concept and as a consequence of the periodicity of the entire coclass tree. In both cases, a group G𝒯1(R) is generated by two elements x,y but the presentation contains the series of higher commutators sj=[sj1,x], 3jn1=cl(G), starting with the main commutator s2=[y,x]. The nilpotency is formally expressed by the relation sn=1, when the group is of order |G|=pn.

3-groups
Figure 3: The coclass graph of finite 3-groups with coclass 1

For p=2, there are two parameters 0w,z1 and the pc-presentation is given by

Template:EquationNote Gn(z,w)=x,y,s2,,sn1x2=sn1w, y2=s21sn1z, [s2,y]=1,s2=[y,x], sj=[sj1,x] for 3jn1

The 2-groups of maximal class, that is of coclass 1, form three periodic infinite sequences,

  • the dihedral groups, D(2n)=Gn(0,0), n3, forming the mainline (with infinitely capable vertices),
  • the generalized quaternion groups, Q(2n)=Gn(0,1), n3, which are all terminal vertices,
  • the semidihedral groups, S(2n)=Gn(1,0), n4, which are also leaves.

For p=3, there are three parameters 0a1 and 1w,z1 and the pc-presentation is given by

Template:EquationNote Gan(z,w)=x,y,s2,,sn1x3=sn1w, y3=s23s31sn1z, [y,s2]=sn1a,s2=[y,x], sj=[sj1,x] for 3jn1

3-groups with parameter a=0 possess an abelian maximal subgroup, those with parameter a=1 do not. More precisely, an existing abelian maximal subgroup is unique, except for the two extra special groups G03(0,0) and G03(0,1), where all four maximal subgroups are abelian.

In contrast to any bigger coclass r2, the coclass graph 𝒒(p,1) exclusively contains p-groups G with abelianization G/G of type (p,p), except for its unique isolated vertex Cp2. The case p=2 is distinguished by the truth of the reverse statement: Any 2-group with abelianization of type (2,2) is of coclass 1 (O. Taussky's Theorem [18]).

interface
Figure 4: The interface between finite 3-groups of coclass 1 and 2 of type (3,3)

Coclass 2

The genesis of the coclass graph 𝒒(p,r) with r2 is not uniform. p-groups with several distinct abelianizations contribute to its constitution. For coclass r=2, there are essential contributions from groups G with abelianizations G/G of the types (p,p), (p2,p), (p,p,p), and an isolated contribution by the cyclic group Cp3 of order p3:

(15)𝒒(p,2)=𝒒(p,p)(p,2)˙𝒒(p2,p)(p,2)˙𝒒(p,p,p)(p,2)˙𝒒(p3)(p,2).

Abelianization of type (p,p)

As opposed to p-groups of coclass 2 with abelianization of type (p2,p) or (p,p,p), which arise as regular descendants of abelian p-groups of the same types, p-groups of coclass 2 with abelianization of type (p,p) arise from irregular descendants of a non-abelian p-group of coclass 1 which is not coclass-settled.

For the prime p=2, such groups do not exist at all, since the 2-group 8,3 is coclass settled, which is the deeper reason for Taussky's Theorem. This remarkable fact has been observed by Giuseppe Bagnera [19] in 1898 already.

For odd primes p3, the existence of p-groups of coclass 2 with abelianization of type (p,p) is due to the fact that the group G03(0,0) is not coclass-settled. Its nuclear rank equals 2, which gives rise to a bifurcation of the descendant tree 𝒯(G03(0,0)) into two coclass graphs. The regular component 𝒯1(G03(0,0)) is a subtree of the unique tree 𝒯1(Cp×Cp) in the coclass graph 𝒒(p,1). The irregular component 𝒯2(G03(0,0)) becomes a subgraph 𝒒=𝒒(p,p)(p,2) of the coclass graph 𝒒(p,2) when the connecting edges of step size 2 of the irregular immediate descendants of G03(0,0) are removed.

For p=3, this subgraph 𝒒 is drawn in Figure 4, which shows the interface between finite 3-groups with coclass 1 and 2 of type (3,3). 𝒒 has seven top level vertices of three important kinds, all having order 243=35, which have been discovered by G. Bagnera .[19]

  • Firstly, there are two terminal Schur σ-groups 243,5 and 243,7 in the sporadic part 𝒒0(3,2) of the coclass graph 𝒒(3,2).
  • Secondly, the two groups G=243,4 and G=243,9 are roots of finite trees 𝒯2(G) in the sporadic part 𝒒0(3,2). However, since they are not coclass-settled, the complete trees 𝒯(G) are infinite .
  • Finally, the three groups 243,3, 243,6 and 243,8 give rise to (infinite) coclass trees, e.g., 𝒯2(729,40), 𝒯2(243,6), 𝒯2(243,8), each having a metabelian mainline, in the coclass graph 𝒒(3,2). None of these three groups is coclass-settled.

Displaying additional information on kernels and targets of Artin transfers, we can draw these trees as structured descendant trees.

Definition. Generally, a Schur group (called a closed group by I. Schur, who coined the concept) is a pro-p group G whose relation rank d2(G)=dim𝔽p(H2(G,𝔽p)) coincides with its generator rank d1(G)=dim𝔽p(H1(G,𝔽p)). A σ-group is a pro-p group G which possesses an automorphism σAut(G) inducing the inversion xx1 on its abelianization G/G. A Schur σ-group is a Schur group G which is also a σ-group and has a finite abelianization G/G.

243,3 is not root of a coclass tree,

since its immediate descendant 729,40, which is root of a coclass tree with metabelian mainline vertices, has two siblings 729,35, resp. 729,34, which give rise to a single, resp. three, coclass tree(s) with non-metabelian mainline vertices having cyclic centres of order 3 and branches of considerable complexity but nevertheless of bounded depth 5.

Table 1: Quotients of the groups G=G(f,g,h) [5]
Parameters
(f,g,h)
Abelianization
G/G
Class-2 quotient
G/γ3(G)
Class-3 quotient
G/γ4(G)
Class-4 quotient
G/γ5(G)
(0,1,0) (3,3) 27,3 243,3 729,40
(0,1,2) (3,3) 27,3 243,6 729,49
(1,1,2) (3,3) 27,3 243,8 729,54
(1,0,0) (9,3) 81,3 243,15 729,79
(0,0,1) (9,3) 81,3 243,17 729,84
(0,0,0) (3,3,3) 81,12 243,53 729,395

Pro-3 groups of coclass 2 with non-trivial centre

B. Eick, C. R. Leedham-Green, M. F. Newman and E. A. O'Brien [5] have constructed a family of infinite pro-3 groups with coclass 2 having a non-trivial centre of order 3. The family members are characterized by three parameters (f,g,h). Their finite quotients generate all mainline vertices with bicyclic centres of type (3,3) of six coclass trees in the coclass graph 𝒒(3,2). The association of parameters to the roots of these six trees is given in Table 1, the tree diagrams, except for the abelianization (3,3,3), are indicated in Figure 4 and Figure 5, and the parametrized pro-3 presentation is given by

Template:EquationNote G(f,g,h)=a,t,za3=zf, [t,ta]=zg, t1+a+a2=zh,z3=1, [z,a]=1, [z,t]=1

interface
Figure 5: Finite 3-groups of coclass 2 of type (9,3)

Abelianization of type (pΒ²,p)

For p=3, the top levels of the subtree 𝒯2(27,2) of the coclass graph 𝒒(3,2) are drawn in Figure 5. The most important vertices of this tree are the eight siblings sharing the common parent 81,3, which are of three important kinds.

  • Firstly, there are three leaves 243,20, 243,19, 243,16 having cyclic centre of order 9, and a single leaf 243,18 with bicyclic centre of type (3,3).
  • Secondly, the group G=243,14 is root of a finite tree 𝒯(G)=𝒯2(G).
  • Finally, the three groups 243,13, 243,15 and 243,17 give rise to infinite coclass trees, e.g., 𝒯2(2187,319), 𝒯2(243,15), 𝒯2(243,17), each having a metabelian mainline, the first with cyclic centres of order 3, the second and third with bicyclic centres of type (3,3).

Here, 243,13 is not root of a coclass tree, since aside from its descendant 2187,319, which is root of a coclass tree with metabelian mainline vertices, it possesses five further descendants which give rise to coclass trees with non-metabelian mainline vertices having cyclic centres of order 3 and branches of extreme complexity, here partially even with unbounded depth.[5]

interface
Figure 6: Finite 2-groups of coclass 2,3,4 and type (2,2,2)

Abelianization of type (p,p,p)

For p=2, resp. p=3, there exists a unique coclass tree with p-groups of type (p,p,p) in the coclass graph 𝒒(p,2). Its root is the elementary abelian p-group of type (p,p,p), that is, 8,5, resp. 27,5. This unique tree corresponds to the pro-2 group of the family #59 by M. F. Newman and E. A. O'Brien,[6] resp. to the pro-3 group given by the parameters (f,g,h)=(0,0,0) in Table 1. For p=2, the tree is indicated in Figure 6, which shows some finite 2-groups with coclass 2,3,4 of type (2,2,2).

Coclass 3

Here again, p-groups with several distinct abelianizations contribute to the constitution of the coclass graph 𝒒(p,3). There are regular, resp. irregular, essential contributions from groups G with abelianizations G/G of the types (p3,p), (p2,p2), (p2,p,p), (p,p,p,p), resp. (p,p), (p2,p), (p,p,p), and an isolated contribution by the cyclic group Cp4 of order p4.

Abelianization of type (p,p,p)

Since the elementary abelian p-group Cp×Cp×Cp of rank 3, that is, 8,5, resp. 27,5, for p=2, resp. p=3, is not coclass-settled, it gives rise to a multifurcation. The regular component 𝒯2(Cp×Cp×Cp) has been described in the section about coclass 2. The irregular component 𝒯3(Cp×Cp×Cp) becomes a subgraph 𝒒=𝒒(p,p,p)(p,3) of the coclass graph 𝒒(p,3) when the connecting edges of step size 2 of the irregular immediate descendants of Cp×Cp×Cp are removed.

For p=2, this subgraph 𝒒 is contained in Figure 6. It has nine top level vertices of order 32=25 which can be divided into terminal and capable vertices.

  • The two groups 32,32 and 32,33 are leaves.
  • The five groups 32,27..31 and the two groups 32,34..35 are infinitely capable.

The trees arising from the capable vertices are associated with infinite pro-2 groups by M. F. Newman and E. A. O'Brien [6] in the following manner.

32,28 gives rise to two trees,

𝒯3(64,140) associated with family #73, and

𝒯3(64,147) associated with family #74.

𝒯3(32,29) is associated with family #75.

𝒯3(32,30) is associated with family #76.

𝒯3(32,31) is associated with family #77.

32,34 gives rise to

𝒯3(64,174) associated with family #78. Finally,

𝒯3(32,35) is associated with family #79.

Table 2: Class-2 quotients Q of certain metabelian 2-groups G of type (2,2,2) [20]
SmallGroups
identifier of Q
Hall Senior
classification of Q
Schur multiplier
β„³(Q)
2-rank of G'
r2(G)
4-rank of G'
r4(G)
Maximum of
r2(Hi/Hi)
32,32 32.040 (2) 2 0 2
32,33 32.041 (2) 2 0 2
32,29 32.037 (2,2) 2 1 3
32,30 32.038 (2,2) 2 1 3
32,35 32.035 (2,2) 2 1 3
32,28 32.036 (2,2,2) 2 2 3
32,27 32.033 (2,2,2,2) 3 2 or 3 4

Hall-Senior classification of 2-groups

Seven of these nine top level vertices have been investigated by E. Benjamin, F. Lemmermeyer and C. Snyder [20] with respect to their occurrence as class-2 quotients Q=G/γ3(G) of bigger metabelian 2-groups G of type (2,2,2) and with coclass 3, which are exactly the members of the descendant trees of the seven vertices. These authors use the classification of 2-groups by M. Hall and J. K. Senior [21] which is put in correspondence with the SmallGroups Library [13] in Table 2. The complexity of the descendant trees of these seven vertices increases with the 2-ranks and 4-ranks indicated in Table 2, where the maximal subgroups of index 2 in G are denoted by Hi, for 1i7.

History

Descendant trees with central quotients as parents (P1) are implicit in P. Hall's 1940 paper [22] about isoclinism of groups. Trees with last non-trivial lower central quotients as parents (P2) were first presented by C. R. Leedham-Green at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Vancouver, 1974 .[1] The first extensive tree diagrams have been drawn manually by J. A. Ascione, G. Havas and C. R. Leedham-Green (1977) ,[23] by J. A. Ascione (1979) ,[15] and by B. Nebelung (1989) .[24] In the former two cases, the parent definition by means of the lower exponent-p central series (P3) was adopted in view of computational advantages, in the latter case, where theoretical aspects were focussed, the parents were taken with respect to the usual lower central series (P2).

See also

  • The kernels and targets of Artin transfers have recently turned out to be compatible with parent-descendant relations between finite p-groups and can favourably be used to endow descendant trees with additional structure.

References

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