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If (h, •) and (k, •) are subgroups of (g, •), prove that (h n k, •) is a subgroup of (g, •). can the same be said for the union, hu k? prove or give a counterexample.

User Bfavaretto
by
5.8k points

1 Answer

5 votes
Let
\eta\in H\cap K. Since both
H and
K are subgroups of
G, we have


\eta\in H\cap K\implies\begin{cases}\eta\in H\\\eta\in K\end{cases}\implies\eta\in G

Because both
H,K are subgroups of
G, then
(H\cap K,\bullet) contains the identity element
e. Furthermore, there must be some element
\eta^(-1)\in H and
\eta^(-1)\in K, i.e.
\eta^(-1)\in H\cap K, such that
\eta\bullet\eta^(-1)=e.

Now let
\eta_1,\eta_2,\eta_3\in H\cap K. By the same reasoning as above it follows that each of these belong in
G, and since
(G,\bullet) is a group, we have
\eta_1\bullet(\eta_2\bullet\eta_3)=(\eta_1\bullet\eta_2)\bullet\eta_3, so
H\cap K is associative under
\bullet.

So
H\cap K contains the identity, is closed with respect to inverses, and is associative under
\bullet. Therefore
H\cap K must be a subgroup of
G.

In the case of union, this is not always the case. Consider the group
(\mathbb Z,+) with subgroups
(H,+) and
(K,+) where
H is the set of all integer multiples of 2 and
K is the set of all integer multiples of 3.

It's easy to show that
H and
K are indeed subgroups, but this is not the case for
H\cup K. We have


H\cup K=\{0,\pm2,\pm4,\ldots\}\cup\{0,\pm3,\pm6,\ldots\}

Take the elements
2\in H and
3\in K. Addition yields
2+3=5, but
5\\ot\in H\cup K, so
H\cup K is not closed under
+.
User James Caccese
by
6.5k points
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