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Non-vanishing elements and complex group algebras

Mahdi Ebrahimi

Abstract

Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $\mathrm{Irr}(G)$ denote the set of irreducible complex characters of $G$. An element $x$ of $G$ is said to be vanishing, if for some $χ$ in $\mathrm{Irr}(G)$, we have $χ(x)=0$. Also the element $x$ is called rational if $x$ is conjugate to $x^i$ for every integer $i$ co-prime to the order of $x$. We define the weight of $G$ as $ω(G):=(\sum_{χ\in \mathrm{Irr}(G)}χ(1))^2/|G|$. In this paper, we show that for every rational non-vanishing element $x\in G$, the order of $C_G(x)$ is at least $ω(G)$.

Non-vanishing elements and complex group algebras

Abstract

Let be a finite group, and let denote the set of irreducible complex characters of . An element of is said to be vanishing, if for some in , we have . Also the element is called rational if is conjugate to for every integer co-prime to the order of . We define the weight of as . In this paper, we show that for every rational non-vanishing element , the order of is at least .

Paper Structure

This paper contains 3 sections, 3 theorems, 7 equations.

Key Result

Theorem 1.1

Let $G$ be a finite group and let $x\in G$ be a rational non-vanishing element. Then $|C_G(x)|\geq\omega(G)$.

Theorems & Definitions (5)

  • Theorem 1.1
  • Theorem 2.1
  • Theorem 2.2
  • proof
  • Example 3.1