Invariable generation of prosoluble groups.
DOI10.1007/s11856-015-1280-7zbMath1345.20039arXiv1410.5271OpenAlexW1480741915MaRDI QIDQ273113
Eloisa Detomi, Andrea Lucchini
Publication date: 21 April 2016
Published in: Archiv der Mathematik, Israel Journal of Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1410.5271
primitive permutation groupsfinite permutation groupsfinite soluble groupsgenerating setsnumbers of generatorsprofinite groupsinvariably generated groupsprosoluble groupsprosupersoluble groupsinvariable generation
Conjugacy classes for groups (20E45) Finite solvable groups, theory of formations, Schunck classes, Fitting classes, (pi)-length, ranks (20D10) Arithmetic and combinatorial problems involving abstract finite groups (20D60) Generators, relations, and presentations of groups (20F05) Residual properties and generalizations; residually finite groups (20E26) Primitive groups (20B15) Limits, profinite groups (20E18) General theory for finite permutation groups (20B05)
Related Items (8)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Invariable generation of prosoluble groups.
- Invariable generation and the Chebotarev invariant of a finite group.
- Invariable generation of infinite groups.
- Invariable generation with elements of coprime prime-power orders.
- Die Eulersche Funktion endlicher auflösbarer Gruppen
- Finite soluble groups
- Random sets which invariably generate the symmetric group
- Transitive groups with fixed-point free permutations
- Cohomological characterisations of finite solvable and nilpotent groups
- On prosupersolvable groups
- Generating wreath products
- A theorem on random matrices and some applications
- Chains of subgroups in symmetric groups
- Simple groups admit Beauville structures
- ENUMERATING FINITE GROUPS
- Primitive Subgroups of Wreath Products in Product Action
- On Random Generation of the Symmetric Group
This page was built for publication: Invariable generation of prosoluble groups.