In mathematics, a 3-step group is a special sort of group of Fitting length at most 3, that is used in the classification of CN groups and in the Feit–Thompson theorem . The definition of a 3-step group in these two cases is slightly different.
In the theory of CN groups, a 3-step group (for some prime p ) is a group such that:
G = Op ,p' ,p (G )
Op ,p ′ (G ) is a Frobenius group with kernel Op (G )
G /Op (G ) is a Frobenius group with kernel Op ,p ′ (G )/Op (G )
Any 3-step group is a solvable CN-group, and conversely any solvable CN-group is either nilpotent, or a Frobenius group, or a 3-step group.
Example: the symmetric group S 4 is a 3-step group for the prime p = 2 .
Feit & Thompson (1963 , p.780) defined a three-step group to be a group G satisfying the following conditions:
The derived group of G is a Hall subgroup with a cyclic complement Q .
If H is the maximal normal nilpotent Hall subgroup of G , then G ′ ′ ⊆H CG (H )⊆G ′ and H CG is nilpotent and H is noncyclic.
For q ∈Q nontrivial, CG (q ) is cyclic and non-trivial and independent of q .
Feit, Walter ; Thompson, John G. (1963), "Solvability of groups of odd order" , Pacific Journal of Mathematics , 13 : 775–1029, doi :10.2140/pjm.1963.13.775 , ISSN 0030-8730 , MR 0166261
Feit, Walter ; Thompson, John G. ; Hall, Marshall Jr (1960), "Finite groups in which the centralizer of any non-identity element is nilpotent", Mathematische Zeitschrift , 74 : 1–17, doi :10.1007/BF01180468 , ISSN 0025-5874 , MR 0114856
Gorenstein, D. (1980), Finite Groups , New York: Chelsea, ISBN 978-0-8284-0301-6 , MR 0569209