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Minimal cover groups

Peter J. Cameron, David Craven, Hamid Reza Dorbidi, Scott Harper, Benjamin Sambale

Abstract

Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a set of finite groups. A finite group $G$ is called an \emph{$\mathcal{F}$-cover} if every group in $\mathcal{F}$ is isomorphic to a subgroup of $G$. An $\mathcal{F}$-cover is called \emph{minimal} if no proper subgroup of $G$ is an $\mathcal{F}$-cover, and \emph{minimum} if its order is smallest among all $\mathcal{F}$-covers. We prove several results about minimal and minimum $\mathcal{F}$-covers: for example, every minimal cover of a set of $p$-groups (for $p$ prime) is a $p$-group (and there may be finitely or infinitely many, for a given set); every minimal cover of a set of perfect groups is perfect; and a minimum cover of a set of two nonabelian simple groups is either their direct product or simple. Our major theorem determines whether $\{\mathbb{Z}_q,\mathbb{Z}_r\}$ has finitely many minimal covers, where $q$ and $r$ are distinct primes. Motivated by this, we say that $n$ is a \emph{Cauchy number} if there are only finitely many groups which are minimal (under inclusion) with respect to having order divisible by $n$, and we determine all such numbers. This extends Cauchy's theorem. We also define a dual concept where subgroups are replaced by quotients, and we pose a number of problems.

Minimal cover groups

Abstract

Let be a set of finite groups. A finite group is called an \emph{-cover} if every group in is isomorphic to a subgroup of . An -cover is called \emph{minimal} if no proper subgroup of is an -cover, and \emph{minimum} if its order is smallest among all -covers. We prove several results about minimal and minimum -covers: for example, every minimal cover of a set of -groups (for prime) is a -group (and there may be finitely or infinitely many, for a given set); every minimal cover of a set of perfect groups is perfect; and a minimum cover of a set of two nonabelian simple groups is either their direct product or simple. Our major theorem determines whether has finitely many minimal covers, where and are distinct primes. Motivated by this, we say that is a \emph{Cauchy number} if there are only finitely many groups which are minimal (under inclusion) with respect to having order divisible by , and we determine all such numbers. This extends Cauchy's theorem. We also define a dual concept where subgroups are replaced by quotients, and we pose a number of problems.
Paper Structure (10 sections, 40 theorems, 20 equations, 1 table)

This paper contains 10 sections, 40 theorems, 20 equations, 1 table.

Key Result

Theorem 1

Let $q < r$ be primes. The set $\{\mathbb{Z}_q,\mathbb{Z}_r\}$ has only finitely many minimal covers if and only if $q = 2$ and $r$ is a Fermat prime, in which case there are exactly three: $\mathbb{Z}_{2r}$, $D_{2r}$ and $\mathbb{Z}_2^{2a} : \mathbb{Z}_r$ where $r = 2^a+1$.

Theorems & Definitions (91)

  • Theorem 1
  • Theorem 2
  • Remark 3
  • Remark 4
  • Theorem 5
  • Theorem 6
  • Remark 7
  • Theorem 8
  • Proposition 2.1
  • proof
  • ...and 81 more