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    Group homomorphism

    From Wikipedia - Reading time: 9 min

    Depiction of a group homomorphism (h) from G (left) to H (right). The oval inside H is the image of h. N is the kernel of h and aN is a coset of N.

    In mathematics, given two groups, (G,∗) and (H, ·), a group homomorphism from (G,∗) to (H, ·) is a function h : GH such that for all u and v in G it holds that

    where the group operation on the left side of the equation is that of G and on the right side that of H.

    From this property, one can deduce that h maps the identity element eG of G to the identity element eH of H,

    and it also maps inverses to inverses in the sense that

    Hence one can say that h "is compatible with the group structure".

    In areas of mathematics where one considers groups endowed with additional structure, a homomorphism sometimes means a map which respects not only the group structure (as above) but also the extra structure. For example, a homomorphism of topological groups is often required to be continuous.

    Intuition[edit]

    The purpose of defining a group homomorphism is to create functions that preserve the algebraic structure. An equivalent definition of group homomorphism is: The function h : GH is a group homomorphism if whenever

    ab = c   we have   h(a) ⋅ h(b) = h(c).

    In other words, the group H in some sense has a similar algebraic structure as G and the homomorphism h preserves that.

    Types[edit]

    Monomorphism
    A group homomorphism that is injective (or, one-to-one); i.e., preserves distinctness.
    Epimorphism
    A group homomorphism that is surjective (or, onto); i.e., reaches every point in the codomain.
    Isomorphism
    A group homomorphism that is bijective; i.e., injective and surjective. Its inverse is also a group homomorphism. In this case, the groups G and H are called isomorphic; they differ only in the notation of their elements (except of identity element) and are identical for all practical purposes. I.e. we re-label all elements except identity.
    Endomorphism
    A group homomorphism, h: GG; the domain and codomain are the same. Also called an endomorphism of G.
    Automorphism
    A group endomorphism that is bijective, and hence an isomorphism. The set of all automorphisms of a group G, with functional composition as operation, itself forms a group, the automorphism group of G. It is denoted by Aut(G). As an example, the automorphism group of (Z, +) contains only two elements, the identity transformation and multiplication with −1; it is isomorphic to (Z/2Z, +).

    Image and kernel[edit]

    We define the kernel of h to be the set of elements in G which are mapped to the identity in H

    and the image of h to be

    The kernel and image of a homomorphism can be interpreted as measuring how close it is to being an isomorphism. The first isomorphism theorem states that the image of a group homomorphism, h(G) is isomorphic to the quotient group G/ker h.

    The kernel of h is a normal subgroup of G:

    and the image of h is a subgroup of H.

    The homomorphism, h, is a group monomorphism; i.e., h is injective (one-to-one) if and only if ker(h) = {eG}. Injection directly gives that there is a unique element in the kernel, and, conversely, a unique element in the kernel gives injection:

    Examples[edit]

    • Consider the cyclic group Z3 = (Z/3Z, +) = ({0, 1, 2}, +) and the group of integers (Z, +). The map h : ZZ/3Z with h(u) = u mod 3 is a group homomorphism. It is surjective and its kernel consists of all integers which are divisible by 3.
    • The set

      forms a group under matrix multiplication. For any complex number u the function fu : GC* defined by

      is a group homomorphism.
    • Consider a multiplicative group of positive real numbers (R+, ⋅) for any complex number u. Then the function fu : R+C defined by
      is a group homomorphism.
    • The exponential map yields a group homomorphism from the group of real numbers R with addition to the group of non-zero real numbers R* with multiplication. The kernel is {0} and the image consists of the positive real numbers.
    • The exponential map also yields a group homomorphism from the group of complex numbers C with addition to the group of non-zero complex numbers C* with multiplication. This map is surjective and has the kernel {2πki : kZ}, as can be seen from Euler's formula. Fields like R and C that have homomorphisms from their additive group to their multiplicative group are thus called exponential fields.
    • The function , defined by is a homomorphism.
    • Consider the two groups and , represented respectively by and , where is the positive real numbers. Then, the function defined by the logarithm function is a homomorphism.

    Category of groups[edit]

    If h : GH and k : HK are group homomorphisms, then so is kh : GK. This shows that the class of all groups, together with group homomorphisms as morphisms, forms a category.

    Homomorphisms of abelian groups[edit]

    If G and H are abelian (i.e., commutative) groups, then the set Hom(G, H) of all group homomorphisms from G to H is itself an abelian group: the sum h + k of two homomorphisms is defined by

    (h + k)(u) = h(u) + k(u)    for all u in G.

    The commutativity of H is needed to prove that h + k is again a group homomorphism.

    The addition of homomorphisms is compatible with the composition of homomorphisms in the following sense: if f is in Hom(K, G), h, k are elements of Hom(G, H), and g is in Hom(H, L), then

    (h + k) ∘ f = (hf) + (kf)    and    g ∘ (h + k) = (gh) + (gk).

    Since the composition is associative, this shows that the set End(G) of all endomorphisms of an abelian group forms a ring, the endomorphism ring of G. For example, the endomorphism ring of the abelian group consisting of the direct sum of m copies of Z/nZ is isomorphic to the ring of m-by-m matrices with entries in Z/nZ. The above compatibility also shows that the category of all abelian groups with group homomorphisms forms a preadditive category; the existence of direct sums and well-behaved kernels makes this category the prototypical example of an abelian category.

    See also[edit]

    • Fundamental theorem on homomorphisms
    • Quasimorphism
    • Ring homomorphism

    References[edit]

    • Dummit, D. S.; Foote, R. (2004). Abstract Algebra (3rd ed.). Wiley. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-0-471-43334-7.
    • Lang, Serge (2002), Algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 211 (Revised third ed.), New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-95385-4, MR 1878556, Zbl 0984.00001

    External links[edit]

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