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Saturday, 9 February 2013

Primitivity

The section is about decomposing group actions, assume Ω transitive.

Definition A non-empty set ΓΩ is called a block if for all gG either Γg=Γ or ΓgΓ={}. If Γ is a block then the set Σ=Σ(Γ)={ΓggG} of all translates of Γ is a block system.

Lemma A block system partitions Ω. proof: Let αΓ and βΩ then β=αg for some g so βΓg and the blocks cover Ω. If ΓgΓh is non-empty then Γgh1=Γ so Γg=Γh.

Definition A G-congruence is an equivalence relation R on Ω such that αRβ implies αgRβg.

Definition If R is a G-congruence then the R-equiv classes form a block system and conversely if Γ is a block we define R by αRβ iff α,βΓg.
proof: easy

The trivial G-congruences are the equality relation and the one induced by the block Ω.

Definition The (transitive) action on Ω is called imprimitive if there is a non-trivial G-congruence. If there are no non-trivial G-congruences an action is primitive.

Proposition Let αΩ, write B(α) for the set of blocks containing α and S(α) for the set of subgroups containing Gα.
  • There are mutually inverse bijections Ψ:B(α)S(α) and Φ:S(α)B(α) defined by ΓΨ=GΓ, HΦ=αH.
  • For Γ,ΓB(α) we have ΓΓ iff ΓΨΓΨ.
proof: long.

Corollary The action of G on Ω is primitive iff each Gα is a maximal subgroup.

Proposition If the action of G on Ω is 2-transitive then it is primitive.
proof: If the action is 2-trans take αΩ. Suppose Γ is a block containing α with |Γ|>1. Take βΓ{α} then for any βΩ{α} there exists gGα with βg=β. As αΓgΓ we must have Γg=Γ so βΓ and hence Γ=Ω. So α lies in no nontrivial block.

Note: The converse is not true, you can have imprimitive actions that aren't 2-transitive.

Proposition If N the set of N-orbits in \Omega is a block system.
proof:  Let \Gamma be an N-orbit, If g \in G with \Gamma g \cap \Gamma \not = \{\} let \alpha \in \Gamma g \cap \Gamma so \alpha = \beta g with \beta \in \Gamma then \Gamma = \alpha N = \beta N. So \Gamma g = \beta N g = \beta g N = \alpha N = \Gamma.

Corollary If G is a primitive permutation group (no non-identity elements fix all elements of \Omega) and 1 \not = N \unlhd G then N acts transitively.
proof: Since 1 \not = N there is an N orbit of size > 1 so by the previous theorem it gives a block system, by primitivity it's the whole of \Omega, so N must act transitively.

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