A new conjecture concerning admissibility of groups (Q1262949)
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English | A new conjecture concerning admissibility of groups |
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A new conjecture concerning admissibility of groups (English)
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1989
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A finite group is said to be admissible if it has a permutation mapping \(g\to \theta (g)\) such that the mapping \(g\to g\cdot \theta (g)\) is also a permutation. A necessary condition for a finite group to be admissible is that the product of all its elements in some order is equal to the identity. Another necessary condition is that its Sylow 2-subgroups are not cyclic; both conditions are sufficient for soluble groups. Since the second condition is satisfied for all non-soluble groups, the authors propose as new conjecture: All non-soluble groups are admissible. And the authors prove: Theorem: If G is a non-soluble group there exists an ordering of the elements of G the product of which is the identity element of the group (so, for non-soluble group both necessary conditions are satisfied).
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admissible groups
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complete mapping
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permutation mapping
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Sylow 2- subgroups
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non-soluble groups
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ordering of the elements
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