Groups whose non-linear irreducible characters are rational valued. (Q974643): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 22:04, 2 July 2024

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Groups whose non-linear irreducible characters are rational valued.
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    Groups whose non-linear irreducible characters are rational valued. (English)
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    4 June 2010
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    Let \(G\) be a finite group. \(G\) is called a rational group or \(\mathbb{Q}\)-group if all irreducible characters of \(G\) are rational valued, and \(G\) is called a \(\mathbb{Q}_1\)-group if all nonlinear irreducible characters of \(G\) are rational valued. The paper under review presents examples of nonabelian \(\mathbb{Q}_1\)-groups which are not \(\mathbb{Q}\)-groups and also presents some results on the structure of \(\mathbb{Q}_1\)-groups. For example, if \(G\) is nonabelian, then \(G\) is a \(\mathbb{Q}_1\)-group if and only if \(\chi(g)\in\mathbb{Q}\) for all \(\chi\in\text{Irr}(G)\) and all \(g\in V(G)\). (Here \(V(G)\) denotes the vanishing-off subgroup of \(G\) which is generated by all \(g\in G\) such that there is a nonlinear \(\chi\in\text{Irr}(G)\) with \(\chi(g)\neq 0\).) Combining this with a result of M. Lewis that \(G=V(G)\) for nonsolvable groups shows that the notions of \(\mathbb{Q}\)-group and \(\mathbb{Q}_1\)-group are the same for nonsolvable groups.
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    finite groups
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    rational characters
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    vanishing-off subgroups
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    irreducible characters
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