Finite groups with few normalizers or involutions (Q2414672)

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Finite groups with few normalizers or involutions
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    Finite groups with few normalizers or involutions (English)
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    17 May 2019
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    A group \(G\) is an \(\mathfrak N_n\)-group (\(\mathfrak N^c_n\), respectively) if it has exactly \(n\) normalizers of subgroups (normalizers of cyclic subgroups, respectively). Zarrin proved that every \(\mathfrak N_n\)-group with \(n\leq 26\) is soluble and conjectured that every \(\mathfrak N^c_n\)-group with \(n\leq 21\) is soluble. The authors generalize these conjectures in the class of finite groups, showing that it is enough to consider only normalizers of \(\{2, 3, 5\}\)-subgroups. In fact they confirm the solubility of a group with at most 26 normalizers of \(\{2, 3, 5\}\)-subgroups and a group with at most 21 normalizers of cyclic \(\{2, 3, 5\}\)-subgroups.
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    normalizer
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    solube groups
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