Nilpotent group
A nilpotent group can be thought of a group that is only finitely removed from an abelian group. Specifically, it is a group such that
is the trivial group, for some integer
, where
is the
th term of the lower central series of
. The least integer
satisfying this condition is called the nilpotency class of
. Using transfinite recursion, the notion of nilpotency class can be extended to any ordinal.
All abelian groups have nilpotency class at most 1; the trivial group is the only group of nilpotency class 0.
Theorem. Let be a group, and let
be a positive integer. Then the following three statements are equivalent:
- The group
has nilpotency class at most
;
- For every subgroup
of
, there exist subgroups
, such that
,
, and
is a normal subgroup of
such that
is commutative, for all integers
.
- The group
has a subgroup
in the center of
such that
has nilpotency class at most
.
Proof. First, we show that (1) implies (2). Set ; we claim that this suffices. We wish first to show that
normalizes
. Since
evidently normalizes
, it suffices to show that
does; to this end, let
be an element of
and
an element of
. Then
Thus
normalizes
. To prove that
is commutative, we note that
is commmutative, and that the canonical homomorphism from
to
is surjective; thus
is commutative.
To show that (2) implies (1), we may take .
To show that (1) implies (3), we may take .
Finally, we show that (3) implies (1). Let be the canonical homomorphism of
onto
. Then
. In particular,
. Hence
is a subset of
, so it lies in the center of
, and
; thus the nilpotency class of
is at most
, as desired.