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 Page 1


THE SYLOW THEOREMS
1. Introduction
The converse of Lagrange's theorem is false: if G is a nite group and djjGj, then there
may not be a subgroup of G with orderd. The simplest example of this is the group A
4
, of
order 12, which has no subgroup of order 6. The Norwegian mathematician Peter Ludwig
Sylow [1] discovered that a converse result is true when d is a prime power: if p is a prime
number and p
k
jjGj then G must contain a subgroup of order p
k
. Sylow also discovered
important relations among the subgroups with order the largest power of p dividingjGj,
such as the fact that all subgroups of that order are conjugate to each other.
For example, a group of order 100 = 2
2
 5
2
must contain subgroups of order 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 25, the subgroups of order 4 are conjugate to each other, and the subgroups of order
25 are conjugate to each other. It is not necessarily the case that the subgroups of order 2
are conjugate or that the subgroups of order 5 are conjugate.
Denition 1.1. LetG be a nite group andp be a prime. Any subgroup ofG whose order
is the highest power ofp dividingjGj is called a p-Sylow subgroup ofG. Ap-Sylow subgroup
for some p is called a Sylow subgroup.
In a group of order 100, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 5-Sylow subgroup has order
25, and a p-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p6= 2 or 5.
In a group of order 12, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 3-Sylow subgroup has order 3,
and ap-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p> 3. Let's look at a few examples of Sylow subgroups
in groups of order 12.
Example 1.2. In Z=(12), the only 2-Sylow subgroup is f0; 3; 6; 9g =h3i and the only
3-Sylow subgroup isf0; 4; 8g =h4i.
Example 1.3. In A
4
there is one subgroup of order 4, so the only 2-Sylow subgroup is
f(1); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23)g =h(12)(34); (14)(23)i:
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:
f(1); (123); (132)g =h(123)i; f(1); (124); (142)g =h(124)i;
f(1); (134); (143)g =h(134)i; f(1); (234); (243)g =h(234)i:
Example 1.4. In D
6
there are three 2-Sylow subgroups:
f1; r
3
; s; r
3
sg =hr
3
;si; f1; r
3
; rs; r
4
sg =hr
3
;rsi; f1; r
3
; r
2
s; r
5
sg =hr
3
;r
2
si:
The only 3-Sylow subgroup of D
6
isf1;r
2
;r
4
g =hr
2
i.
In a group of order 24, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 8 and a 3-Sylow subgroup has order
3. Let's look at two examples.
Example 1.5. In S
4
, the 3-Sylow subgroups are the 3-Sylow subgroups of A
4
(an element
of 3-power order inS
4
must be a 3-cycle, and they all lie inA
4
). We determined the 3-Sylow
subgroups of A
4
in Example 1.3; there are four of them.
Page 2


THE SYLOW THEOREMS
1. Introduction
The converse of Lagrange's theorem is false: if G is a nite group and djjGj, then there
may not be a subgroup of G with orderd. The simplest example of this is the group A
4
, of
order 12, which has no subgroup of order 6. The Norwegian mathematician Peter Ludwig
Sylow [1] discovered that a converse result is true when d is a prime power: if p is a prime
number and p
k
jjGj then G must contain a subgroup of order p
k
. Sylow also discovered
important relations among the subgroups with order the largest power of p dividingjGj,
such as the fact that all subgroups of that order are conjugate to each other.
For example, a group of order 100 = 2
2
 5
2
must contain subgroups of order 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 25, the subgroups of order 4 are conjugate to each other, and the subgroups of order
25 are conjugate to each other. It is not necessarily the case that the subgroups of order 2
are conjugate or that the subgroups of order 5 are conjugate.
Denition 1.1. LetG be a nite group andp be a prime. Any subgroup ofG whose order
is the highest power ofp dividingjGj is called a p-Sylow subgroup ofG. Ap-Sylow subgroup
for some p is called a Sylow subgroup.
In a group of order 100, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 5-Sylow subgroup has order
25, and a p-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p6= 2 or 5.
In a group of order 12, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 3-Sylow subgroup has order 3,
and ap-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p> 3. Let's look at a few examples of Sylow subgroups
in groups of order 12.
Example 1.2. In Z=(12), the only 2-Sylow subgroup is f0; 3; 6; 9g =h3i and the only
3-Sylow subgroup isf0; 4; 8g =h4i.
Example 1.3. In A
4
there is one subgroup of order 4, so the only 2-Sylow subgroup is
f(1); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23)g =h(12)(34); (14)(23)i:
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:
f(1); (123); (132)g =h(123)i; f(1); (124); (142)g =h(124)i;
f(1); (134); (143)g =h(134)i; f(1); (234); (243)g =h(234)i:
Example 1.4. In D
6
there are three 2-Sylow subgroups:
f1; r
3
; s; r
3
sg =hr
3
;si; f1; r
3
; rs; r
4
sg =hr
3
;rsi; f1; r
3
; r
2
s; r
5
sg =hr
3
;r
2
si:
The only 3-Sylow subgroup of D
6
isf1;r
2
;r
4
g =hr
2
i.
In a group of order 24, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 8 and a 3-Sylow subgroup has order
3. Let's look at two examples.
Example 1.5. In S
4
, the 3-Sylow subgroups are the 3-Sylow subgroups of A
4
(an element
of 3-power order inS
4
must be a 3-cycle, and they all lie inA
4
). We determined the 3-Sylow
subgroups of A
4
in Example 1.3; there are four of them.
There are three 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
, and they are interesting to work out since they
can be understood as copies of D
4
inside S
4
. The number of ways to label the four vertices
of a square as 1, 2, 3, and 4 is 4! = 24, but up to rotations and re
ections of the square
there are really just three dierent ways of carrying out the labeling, as follows.
1
2 3
4 1
2 4
3 1
3 2
4
Any other labeling of the square is a rotated or re
ected version of one of these three squares.
For example, the square below is obtained from the middle square above by re
ecting across
a horizontal line through the middle of the square.
2
1 3
4
WhenD
4
acts on a square with labeled vertices, each motion of D
4
creates a permutation
of the four vertices, and this permutation is an element of S
4
. For example, a 90 degree
rotation of the square is a 4-cycle on the vertices. In this way we obtain a copy of D
4
inside
S
4
. The three essentially dierent labelings of the vertices of the square above embed D
4
into S
4
as three dierent subgroups of order 8:
f1; (1234); (1432); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (13); (24)g =h(1234); (13)i;
f1; (1243); (1342); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (14); (23)g =h(1243); (14)i;
f1; (1324); (1423); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (12); (34)g =h(1324); (12)i:
These are the 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
.
Example 1.6. The group SL
2
(Z=(3)) has order 24. An explicit tabulation of the elements
of this group reveals that there are only 8 elements in the group with 2-power order:

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

:
These form the only 2-Sylow subgroup, which is isomorphic to Q
8
by labeling the matrices
in the rst row as 1;i;j;k and the matrices in the second row as1;i;j;k.
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:h(
1 1
0 1
)i,h(
1 0
1 1
)i,h(
0 1
2 2
)i, andh(
0 2
1 2
)i.
Here are the Sylow theorems. They are often given in three parts. The result we call
Sylow III* is not always stated explicitly as part of the Sylow theorems.
Page 3


THE SYLOW THEOREMS
1. Introduction
The converse of Lagrange's theorem is false: if G is a nite group and djjGj, then there
may not be a subgroup of G with orderd. The simplest example of this is the group A
4
, of
order 12, which has no subgroup of order 6. The Norwegian mathematician Peter Ludwig
Sylow [1] discovered that a converse result is true when d is a prime power: if p is a prime
number and p
k
jjGj then G must contain a subgroup of order p
k
. Sylow also discovered
important relations among the subgroups with order the largest power of p dividingjGj,
such as the fact that all subgroups of that order are conjugate to each other.
For example, a group of order 100 = 2
2
 5
2
must contain subgroups of order 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 25, the subgroups of order 4 are conjugate to each other, and the subgroups of order
25 are conjugate to each other. It is not necessarily the case that the subgroups of order 2
are conjugate or that the subgroups of order 5 are conjugate.
Denition 1.1. LetG be a nite group andp be a prime. Any subgroup ofG whose order
is the highest power ofp dividingjGj is called a p-Sylow subgroup ofG. Ap-Sylow subgroup
for some p is called a Sylow subgroup.
In a group of order 100, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 5-Sylow subgroup has order
25, and a p-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p6= 2 or 5.
In a group of order 12, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 3-Sylow subgroup has order 3,
and ap-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p> 3. Let's look at a few examples of Sylow subgroups
in groups of order 12.
Example 1.2. In Z=(12), the only 2-Sylow subgroup is f0; 3; 6; 9g =h3i and the only
3-Sylow subgroup isf0; 4; 8g =h4i.
Example 1.3. In A
4
there is one subgroup of order 4, so the only 2-Sylow subgroup is
f(1); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23)g =h(12)(34); (14)(23)i:
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:
f(1); (123); (132)g =h(123)i; f(1); (124); (142)g =h(124)i;
f(1); (134); (143)g =h(134)i; f(1); (234); (243)g =h(234)i:
Example 1.4. In D
6
there are three 2-Sylow subgroups:
f1; r
3
; s; r
3
sg =hr
3
;si; f1; r
3
; rs; r
4
sg =hr
3
;rsi; f1; r
3
; r
2
s; r
5
sg =hr
3
;r
2
si:
The only 3-Sylow subgroup of D
6
isf1;r
2
;r
4
g =hr
2
i.
In a group of order 24, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 8 and a 3-Sylow subgroup has order
3. Let's look at two examples.
Example 1.5. In S
4
, the 3-Sylow subgroups are the 3-Sylow subgroups of A
4
(an element
of 3-power order inS
4
must be a 3-cycle, and they all lie inA
4
). We determined the 3-Sylow
subgroups of A
4
in Example 1.3; there are four of them.
There are three 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
, and they are interesting to work out since they
can be understood as copies of D
4
inside S
4
. The number of ways to label the four vertices
of a square as 1, 2, 3, and 4 is 4! = 24, but up to rotations and re
ections of the square
there are really just three dierent ways of carrying out the labeling, as follows.
1
2 3
4 1
2 4
3 1
3 2
4
Any other labeling of the square is a rotated or re
ected version of one of these three squares.
For example, the square below is obtained from the middle square above by re
ecting across
a horizontal line through the middle of the square.
2
1 3
4
WhenD
4
acts on a square with labeled vertices, each motion of D
4
creates a permutation
of the four vertices, and this permutation is an element of S
4
. For example, a 90 degree
rotation of the square is a 4-cycle on the vertices. In this way we obtain a copy of D
4
inside
S
4
. The three essentially dierent labelings of the vertices of the square above embed D
4
into S
4
as three dierent subgroups of order 8:
f1; (1234); (1432); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (13); (24)g =h(1234); (13)i;
f1; (1243); (1342); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (14); (23)g =h(1243); (14)i;
f1; (1324); (1423); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (12); (34)g =h(1324); (12)i:
These are the 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
.
Example 1.6. The group SL
2
(Z=(3)) has order 24. An explicit tabulation of the elements
of this group reveals that there are only 8 elements in the group with 2-power order:

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

:
These form the only 2-Sylow subgroup, which is isomorphic to Q
8
by labeling the matrices
in the rst row as 1;i;j;k and the matrices in the second row as1;i;j;k.
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:h(
1 1
0 1
)i,h(
1 0
1 1
)i,h(
0 1
2 2
)i, andh(
0 2
1 2
)i.
Here are the Sylow theorems. They are often given in three parts. The result we call
Sylow III* is not always stated explicitly as part of the Sylow theorems.
Theorem 1.7 (Sylow I). A nite group G has a p-Sylow subgroup for every prime p and
any p-subgroup of G lies in a p-Sylow subgroup of G.
Theorem 1.8 (Sylow II). For each prime p, the p-Sylow subgroups of G are conjugate.
Theorem 1.9 (Sylow III). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups of
G. WritejGj =p
k
m, where p doesn't divide m. Then
n
p
 1 modp and n
p
jm:
Theorem 1.10 (Sylow III*). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups
of G. Then n
p
= [G : N(P )], where P is any p-Sylow subgroup and N(P ) is its normalizer.
Sylow II says for two p-Sylow subgroups H and K of G that there is some g2 G such
that gHg
1
=K. This is illustrated in the table below.
Example Group Size p H K g
1.3 A
4
12 3 h(123)i h(124)i (243)
1.4 D
6
12 2 hr
3
;si hr
3
;rsi r
2
1.5 S
4
24 2 h(1234); (13)i h(1243); (14)i (34)
1.6 SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 3 h(
1 1
0 1
)i h(
1 0
1 1
)i (
0 1
2 1
)
When trying to conjugate one cyclic subgroup to another cyclic subgroup, be careful: not
all generators of the two groups have to be conjugate. For example, in A
4
the subgroups
h(123)i =f(1); (123); (132)g andh(124)i =f(1); (124); (142)g are conjugate, but the
conjugacy class of (123) in A
4
isf(123); (142); (134); (243)g, so there's no way to conjugate
(123) to (124) by an element of A
4
; we must conjugate (123) to (142). The 3-cycles (123)
and (124) are conjugate in S
4
, but not in A
4
. Similarly, (
1 1
0 1
) and (
1 0
1 1
) are conjugate in
GL
2
(Z=(3)) but not in SL
2
(Z=(3)), so when Sylow II says the subgroupsh(
1 1
0 1
)i andh(
1 0
1 1
)i
are conjugate in SL
2
(Z=(3)) a conjugating matrix must send (
1 1
0 1
) to (
1 0
1 1
)
2
= (
1 0
2 1
).
Let's see what Sylow III tells us about the number of 2-Sylow and 3-Sylow subgroups of a
group of order 12. Forp = 2 andp = 3 in Sylow III, the divisibility conditions aren
2
j 3 and
n
3
j 4 and the congruence conditions are n
2
 1 mod 2 and n
3
 1 mod 3. The divisibility
conditions imply n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1, 2, or 4. The congruence n
2
 1 mod 2 tells us
nothing new (1 and 3 are both odd), but the congruence n
3
 1 mod 3 rules out the option
n
3
= 2. Therefore n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1 or 4 whenjGj = 12. IfjGj = 24 we again nd n
2
is 1 or 3 whilen
3
is 1 or 4. (For instance, from n
3
j 8 andn
3
 1 mod 3 the only choices are
n
3
= 1 and n
3
= 4.) Therefore as soon as we nd more than one 2-Sylow subgroup there
must be three of them, and as soon as we nd more than one 3-Sylow subgroup there must
be four of them. The table below shows the values of n
2
and n
3
in the examples above.
Group Size n
2
n
3
Z=(12) 12 1 1
A
4
12 1 4
D
6
12 3 1
S
4
24 3 4
SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 1 4
2. Proof of the Sylow Theorems
Our proof of the Sylow theorems will use group actions. The table below is a summary.
For each theorem the table lists a group, a set it acts on, and the action. We write Syl
p
(G)
for the set of p-Sylow subgroups of G, so n
p
=j Syl
p
(G)j.
Page 4


THE SYLOW THEOREMS
1. Introduction
The converse of Lagrange's theorem is false: if G is a nite group and djjGj, then there
may not be a subgroup of G with orderd. The simplest example of this is the group A
4
, of
order 12, which has no subgroup of order 6. The Norwegian mathematician Peter Ludwig
Sylow [1] discovered that a converse result is true when d is a prime power: if p is a prime
number and p
k
jjGj then G must contain a subgroup of order p
k
. Sylow also discovered
important relations among the subgroups with order the largest power of p dividingjGj,
such as the fact that all subgroups of that order are conjugate to each other.
For example, a group of order 100 = 2
2
 5
2
must contain subgroups of order 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 25, the subgroups of order 4 are conjugate to each other, and the subgroups of order
25 are conjugate to each other. It is not necessarily the case that the subgroups of order 2
are conjugate or that the subgroups of order 5 are conjugate.
Denition 1.1. LetG be a nite group andp be a prime. Any subgroup ofG whose order
is the highest power ofp dividingjGj is called a p-Sylow subgroup ofG. Ap-Sylow subgroup
for some p is called a Sylow subgroup.
In a group of order 100, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 5-Sylow subgroup has order
25, and a p-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p6= 2 or 5.
In a group of order 12, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 3-Sylow subgroup has order 3,
and ap-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p> 3. Let's look at a few examples of Sylow subgroups
in groups of order 12.
Example 1.2. In Z=(12), the only 2-Sylow subgroup is f0; 3; 6; 9g =h3i and the only
3-Sylow subgroup isf0; 4; 8g =h4i.
Example 1.3. In A
4
there is one subgroup of order 4, so the only 2-Sylow subgroup is
f(1); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23)g =h(12)(34); (14)(23)i:
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:
f(1); (123); (132)g =h(123)i; f(1); (124); (142)g =h(124)i;
f(1); (134); (143)g =h(134)i; f(1); (234); (243)g =h(234)i:
Example 1.4. In D
6
there are three 2-Sylow subgroups:
f1; r
3
; s; r
3
sg =hr
3
;si; f1; r
3
; rs; r
4
sg =hr
3
;rsi; f1; r
3
; r
2
s; r
5
sg =hr
3
;r
2
si:
The only 3-Sylow subgroup of D
6
isf1;r
2
;r
4
g =hr
2
i.
In a group of order 24, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 8 and a 3-Sylow subgroup has order
3. Let's look at two examples.
Example 1.5. In S
4
, the 3-Sylow subgroups are the 3-Sylow subgroups of A
4
(an element
of 3-power order inS
4
must be a 3-cycle, and they all lie inA
4
). We determined the 3-Sylow
subgroups of A
4
in Example 1.3; there are four of them.
There are three 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
, and they are interesting to work out since they
can be understood as copies of D
4
inside S
4
. The number of ways to label the four vertices
of a square as 1, 2, 3, and 4 is 4! = 24, but up to rotations and re
ections of the square
there are really just three dierent ways of carrying out the labeling, as follows.
1
2 3
4 1
2 4
3 1
3 2
4
Any other labeling of the square is a rotated or re
ected version of one of these three squares.
For example, the square below is obtained from the middle square above by re
ecting across
a horizontal line through the middle of the square.
2
1 3
4
WhenD
4
acts on a square with labeled vertices, each motion of D
4
creates a permutation
of the four vertices, and this permutation is an element of S
4
. For example, a 90 degree
rotation of the square is a 4-cycle on the vertices. In this way we obtain a copy of D
4
inside
S
4
. The three essentially dierent labelings of the vertices of the square above embed D
4
into S
4
as three dierent subgroups of order 8:
f1; (1234); (1432); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (13); (24)g =h(1234); (13)i;
f1; (1243); (1342); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (14); (23)g =h(1243); (14)i;
f1; (1324); (1423); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (12); (34)g =h(1324); (12)i:
These are the 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
.
Example 1.6. The group SL
2
(Z=(3)) has order 24. An explicit tabulation of the elements
of this group reveals that there are only 8 elements in the group with 2-power order:

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

:
These form the only 2-Sylow subgroup, which is isomorphic to Q
8
by labeling the matrices
in the rst row as 1;i;j;k and the matrices in the second row as1;i;j;k.
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:h(
1 1
0 1
)i,h(
1 0
1 1
)i,h(
0 1
2 2
)i, andh(
0 2
1 2
)i.
Here are the Sylow theorems. They are often given in three parts. The result we call
Sylow III* is not always stated explicitly as part of the Sylow theorems.
Theorem 1.7 (Sylow I). A nite group G has a p-Sylow subgroup for every prime p and
any p-subgroup of G lies in a p-Sylow subgroup of G.
Theorem 1.8 (Sylow II). For each prime p, the p-Sylow subgroups of G are conjugate.
Theorem 1.9 (Sylow III). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups of
G. WritejGj =p
k
m, where p doesn't divide m. Then
n
p
 1 modp and n
p
jm:
Theorem 1.10 (Sylow III*). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups
of G. Then n
p
= [G : N(P )], where P is any p-Sylow subgroup and N(P ) is its normalizer.
Sylow II says for two p-Sylow subgroups H and K of G that there is some g2 G such
that gHg
1
=K. This is illustrated in the table below.
Example Group Size p H K g
1.3 A
4
12 3 h(123)i h(124)i (243)
1.4 D
6
12 2 hr
3
;si hr
3
;rsi r
2
1.5 S
4
24 2 h(1234); (13)i h(1243); (14)i (34)
1.6 SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 3 h(
1 1
0 1
)i h(
1 0
1 1
)i (
0 1
2 1
)
When trying to conjugate one cyclic subgroup to another cyclic subgroup, be careful: not
all generators of the two groups have to be conjugate. For example, in A
4
the subgroups
h(123)i =f(1); (123); (132)g andh(124)i =f(1); (124); (142)g are conjugate, but the
conjugacy class of (123) in A
4
isf(123); (142); (134); (243)g, so there's no way to conjugate
(123) to (124) by an element of A
4
; we must conjugate (123) to (142). The 3-cycles (123)
and (124) are conjugate in S
4
, but not in A
4
. Similarly, (
1 1
0 1
) and (
1 0
1 1
) are conjugate in
GL
2
(Z=(3)) but not in SL
2
(Z=(3)), so when Sylow II says the subgroupsh(
1 1
0 1
)i andh(
1 0
1 1
)i
are conjugate in SL
2
(Z=(3)) a conjugating matrix must send (
1 1
0 1
) to (
1 0
1 1
)
2
= (
1 0
2 1
).
Let's see what Sylow III tells us about the number of 2-Sylow and 3-Sylow subgroups of a
group of order 12. Forp = 2 andp = 3 in Sylow III, the divisibility conditions aren
2
j 3 and
n
3
j 4 and the congruence conditions are n
2
 1 mod 2 and n
3
 1 mod 3. The divisibility
conditions imply n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1, 2, or 4. The congruence n
2
 1 mod 2 tells us
nothing new (1 and 3 are both odd), but the congruence n
3
 1 mod 3 rules out the option
n
3
= 2. Therefore n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1 or 4 whenjGj = 12. IfjGj = 24 we again nd n
2
is 1 or 3 whilen
3
is 1 or 4. (For instance, from n
3
j 8 andn
3
 1 mod 3 the only choices are
n
3
= 1 and n
3
= 4.) Therefore as soon as we nd more than one 2-Sylow subgroup there
must be three of them, and as soon as we nd more than one 3-Sylow subgroup there must
be four of them. The table below shows the values of n
2
and n
3
in the examples above.
Group Size n
2
n
3
Z=(12) 12 1 1
A
4
12 1 4
D
6
12 3 1
S
4
24 3 4
SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 1 4
2. Proof of the Sylow Theorems
Our proof of the Sylow theorems will use group actions. The table below is a summary.
For each theorem the table lists a group, a set it acts on, and the action. We write Syl
p
(G)
for the set of p-Sylow subgroups of G, so n
p
=j Syl
p
(G)j.
Theorem Group Set Action
Sylow I p-subgroup H G=H left mult.
Sylow II p-Sylow subgroup Q G=P left mult.
Sylow III (n
p
 1 modp) P2 Syl
p
(G) Syl
p
(G) conjugation
Sylow III (n
p
jm) G Syl
p
(G) conjugation
Sylow III

G Syl
p
(G) conjugation
The two conclusions of Sylow III are listed separately in the table since they are proved
using dierent group actions.
Our proofs will usually involve the action of a p-group on a set and use the xed-point
congruence for such actions:jXjj Fix

(X)j modp, whereX is a nite set being acted on
by a nite p-group .
Proof of Sylow I: Letp
k
be the highest power ofp injGj. The result is obvious ifk = 0,
since the trivial subgroup is a p-Sylow subgroup, so we can take k 1, hence pjjGj.
Our strategy for proving Sylow I is to prove a stronger result: there is a subgroup
of order p
i
for 0 i k. More specically, ifjHj = p
i
and i < k, we will show there is
a p-subgroup H
0
 H with [H
0
: H] = p, sojH
0
j = p
i+1
. Then, starting with H as the
trivial subgroup, we can repeat this process with H
0
in place of H to create a rising tower
of subgroups
feg =H
0
H
1
H
2

wherejH
i
j =p
i
, and after k steps we reach H
k
, which is a p-Sylow subgroup of G.
Consider the left multiplication action of H on the left cosets G=H (this need not be
a group). This is an action of a nite p-group H on the set G=H, so by the xed-point
congruence for actions of nontrivial p-groups,
(2.1) jG=Hjj Fix
H
(G=H)j modp:
Let's unravel what it means for a coset gH in G=H to be a xed point by the group H
under left multiplication:
hgH =gH for all h2H () hg2gH for all h2H
() g
1
hg2H for all h2H
() g
1
HgH
() g
1
Hg =H becausejg
1
Hgj =jHj
() g2 N(H):
Thus Fix
H
(G=H) =fgH :g2 N(H)g = N(H)=H, so (2.1) becomes
(2.2) [G :H] [N(H) :H] modp:
Because HC N(H), N(H)=H is a group.
When jHj = p
i
and i < k, the index [G : H] is divisible by p, so the congruence
(2.2) implies [N(H) : H] is divisible by p, so N(H)=H is a group with order divisible by
p. Thus N(H)=H has a subgroup of order p by Cauchy's theorem. All subgroups of the
quotient group N(H)=H have the form H
0
=H, where H
0
is a subgroup between H and
N(H). Therefore a subgroup of order p in N(H)=H is H
0
=H such that [H
0
: H] = p, so
jH
0
j =pjHj =p
i+1
.
Proof of Sylow II: Pick two p-Sylow subgroups P and Q. We want to show they are
conjugate.
Page 5


THE SYLOW THEOREMS
1. Introduction
The converse of Lagrange's theorem is false: if G is a nite group and djjGj, then there
may not be a subgroup of G with orderd. The simplest example of this is the group A
4
, of
order 12, which has no subgroup of order 6. The Norwegian mathematician Peter Ludwig
Sylow [1] discovered that a converse result is true when d is a prime power: if p is a prime
number and p
k
jjGj then G must contain a subgroup of order p
k
. Sylow also discovered
important relations among the subgroups with order the largest power of p dividingjGj,
such as the fact that all subgroups of that order are conjugate to each other.
For example, a group of order 100 = 2
2
 5
2
must contain subgroups of order 1, 2, 4, 5,
and 25, the subgroups of order 4 are conjugate to each other, and the subgroups of order
25 are conjugate to each other. It is not necessarily the case that the subgroups of order 2
are conjugate or that the subgroups of order 5 are conjugate.
Denition 1.1. LetG be a nite group andp be a prime. Any subgroup ofG whose order
is the highest power ofp dividingjGj is called a p-Sylow subgroup ofG. Ap-Sylow subgroup
for some p is called a Sylow subgroup.
In a group of order 100, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 5-Sylow subgroup has order
25, and a p-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p6= 2 or 5.
In a group of order 12, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 4, a 3-Sylow subgroup has order 3,
and ap-Sylow subgroup is trivial if p> 3. Let's look at a few examples of Sylow subgroups
in groups of order 12.
Example 1.2. In Z=(12), the only 2-Sylow subgroup is f0; 3; 6; 9g =h3i and the only
3-Sylow subgroup isf0; 4; 8g =h4i.
Example 1.3. In A
4
there is one subgroup of order 4, so the only 2-Sylow subgroup is
f(1); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23)g =h(12)(34); (14)(23)i:
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:
f(1); (123); (132)g =h(123)i; f(1); (124); (142)g =h(124)i;
f(1); (134); (143)g =h(134)i; f(1); (234); (243)g =h(234)i:
Example 1.4. In D
6
there are three 2-Sylow subgroups:
f1; r
3
; s; r
3
sg =hr
3
;si; f1; r
3
; rs; r
4
sg =hr
3
;rsi; f1; r
3
; r
2
s; r
5
sg =hr
3
;r
2
si:
The only 3-Sylow subgroup of D
6
isf1;r
2
;r
4
g =hr
2
i.
In a group of order 24, a 2-Sylow subgroup has order 8 and a 3-Sylow subgroup has order
3. Let's look at two examples.
Example 1.5. In S
4
, the 3-Sylow subgroups are the 3-Sylow subgroups of A
4
(an element
of 3-power order inS
4
must be a 3-cycle, and they all lie inA
4
). We determined the 3-Sylow
subgroups of A
4
in Example 1.3; there are four of them.
There are three 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
, and they are interesting to work out since they
can be understood as copies of D
4
inside S
4
. The number of ways to label the four vertices
of a square as 1, 2, 3, and 4 is 4! = 24, but up to rotations and re
ections of the square
there are really just three dierent ways of carrying out the labeling, as follows.
1
2 3
4 1
2 4
3 1
3 2
4
Any other labeling of the square is a rotated or re
ected version of one of these three squares.
For example, the square below is obtained from the middle square above by re
ecting across
a horizontal line through the middle of the square.
2
1 3
4
WhenD
4
acts on a square with labeled vertices, each motion of D
4
creates a permutation
of the four vertices, and this permutation is an element of S
4
. For example, a 90 degree
rotation of the square is a 4-cycle on the vertices. In this way we obtain a copy of D
4
inside
S
4
. The three essentially dierent labelings of the vertices of the square above embed D
4
into S
4
as three dierent subgroups of order 8:
f1; (1234); (1432); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (13); (24)g =h(1234); (13)i;
f1; (1243); (1342); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (14); (23)g =h(1243); (14)i;
f1; (1324); (1423); (12)(34); (13)(24); (14)(23); (12); (34)g =h(1324); (12)i:
These are the 2-Sylow subgroups of S
4
.
Example 1.6. The group SL
2
(Z=(3)) has order 24. An explicit tabulation of the elements
of this group reveals that there are only 8 elements in the group with 2-power order:

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 0
0 1

;

0 1
1 0

;

1 1
1 1

;

1 1
1 1

:
These form the only 2-Sylow subgroup, which is isomorphic to Q
8
by labeling the matrices
in the rst row as 1;i;j;k and the matrices in the second row as1;i;j;k.
There are four 3-Sylow subgroups:h(
1 1
0 1
)i,h(
1 0
1 1
)i,h(
0 1
2 2
)i, andh(
0 2
1 2
)i.
Here are the Sylow theorems. They are often given in three parts. The result we call
Sylow III* is not always stated explicitly as part of the Sylow theorems.
Theorem 1.7 (Sylow I). A nite group G has a p-Sylow subgroup for every prime p and
any p-subgroup of G lies in a p-Sylow subgroup of G.
Theorem 1.8 (Sylow II). For each prime p, the p-Sylow subgroups of G are conjugate.
Theorem 1.9 (Sylow III). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups of
G. WritejGj =p
k
m, where p doesn't divide m. Then
n
p
 1 modp and n
p
jm:
Theorem 1.10 (Sylow III*). For each prime p, let n
p
be the number of p-Sylow subgroups
of G. Then n
p
= [G : N(P )], where P is any p-Sylow subgroup and N(P ) is its normalizer.
Sylow II says for two p-Sylow subgroups H and K of G that there is some g2 G such
that gHg
1
=K. This is illustrated in the table below.
Example Group Size p H K g
1.3 A
4
12 3 h(123)i h(124)i (243)
1.4 D
6
12 2 hr
3
;si hr
3
;rsi r
2
1.5 S
4
24 2 h(1234); (13)i h(1243); (14)i (34)
1.6 SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 3 h(
1 1
0 1
)i h(
1 0
1 1
)i (
0 1
2 1
)
When trying to conjugate one cyclic subgroup to another cyclic subgroup, be careful: not
all generators of the two groups have to be conjugate. For example, in A
4
the subgroups
h(123)i =f(1); (123); (132)g andh(124)i =f(1); (124); (142)g are conjugate, but the
conjugacy class of (123) in A
4
isf(123); (142); (134); (243)g, so there's no way to conjugate
(123) to (124) by an element of A
4
; we must conjugate (123) to (142). The 3-cycles (123)
and (124) are conjugate in S
4
, but not in A
4
. Similarly, (
1 1
0 1
) and (
1 0
1 1
) are conjugate in
GL
2
(Z=(3)) but not in SL
2
(Z=(3)), so when Sylow II says the subgroupsh(
1 1
0 1
)i andh(
1 0
1 1
)i
are conjugate in SL
2
(Z=(3)) a conjugating matrix must send (
1 1
0 1
) to (
1 0
1 1
)
2
= (
1 0
2 1
).
Let's see what Sylow III tells us about the number of 2-Sylow and 3-Sylow subgroups of a
group of order 12. Forp = 2 andp = 3 in Sylow III, the divisibility conditions aren
2
j 3 and
n
3
j 4 and the congruence conditions are n
2
 1 mod 2 and n
3
 1 mod 3. The divisibility
conditions imply n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1, 2, or 4. The congruence n
2
 1 mod 2 tells us
nothing new (1 and 3 are both odd), but the congruence n
3
 1 mod 3 rules out the option
n
3
= 2. Therefore n
2
is 1 or 3 and n
3
is 1 or 4 whenjGj = 12. IfjGj = 24 we again nd n
2
is 1 or 3 whilen
3
is 1 or 4. (For instance, from n
3
j 8 andn
3
 1 mod 3 the only choices are
n
3
= 1 and n
3
= 4.) Therefore as soon as we nd more than one 2-Sylow subgroup there
must be three of them, and as soon as we nd more than one 3-Sylow subgroup there must
be four of them. The table below shows the values of n
2
and n
3
in the examples above.
Group Size n
2
n
3
Z=(12) 12 1 1
A
4
12 1 4
D
6
12 3 1
S
4
24 3 4
SL
2
(Z=(3)) 24 1 4
2. Proof of the Sylow Theorems
Our proof of the Sylow theorems will use group actions. The table below is a summary.
For each theorem the table lists a group, a set it acts on, and the action. We write Syl
p
(G)
for the set of p-Sylow subgroups of G, so n
p
=j Syl
p
(G)j.
Theorem Group Set Action
Sylow I p-subgroup H G=H left mult.
Sylow II p-Sylow subgroup Q G=P left mult.
Sylow III (n
p
 1 modp) P2 Syl
p
(G) Syl
p
(G) conjugation
Sylow III (n
p
jm) G Syl
p
(G) conjugation
Sylow III

G Syl
p
(G) conjugation
The two conclusions of Sylow III are listed separately in the table since they are proved
using dierent group actions.
Our proofs will usually involve the action of a p-group on a set and use the xed-point
congruence for such actions:jXjj Fix

(X)j modp, whereX is a nite set being acted on
by a nite p-group .
Proof of Sylow I: Letp
k
be the highest power ofp injGj. The result is obvious ifk = 0,
since the trivial subgroup is a p-Sylow subgroup, so we can take k 1, hence pjjGj.
Our strategy for proving Sylow I is to prove a stronger result: there is a subgroup
of order p
i
for 0 i k. More specically, ifjHj = p
i
and i < k, we will show there is
a p-subgroup H
0
 H with [H
0
: H] = p, sojH
0
j = p
i+1
. Then, starting with H as the
trivial subgroup, we can repeat this process with H
0
in place of H to create a rising tower
of subgroups
feg =H
0
H
1
H
2

wherejH
i
j =p
i
, and after k steps we reach H
k
, which is a p-Sylow subgroup of G.
Consider the left multiplication action of H on the left cosets G=H (this need not be
a group). This is an action of a nite p-group H on the set G=H, so by the xed-point
congruence for actions of nontrivial p-groups,
(2.1) jG=Hjj Fix
H
(G=H)j modp:
Let's unravel what it means for a coset gH in G=H to be a xed point by the group H
under left multiplication:
hgH =gH for all h2H () hg2gH for all h2H
() g
1
hg2H for all h2H
() g
1
HgH
() g
1
Hg =H becausejg
1
Hgj =jHj
() g2 N(H):
Thus Fix
H
(G=H) =fgH :g2 N(H)g = N(H)=H, so (2.1) becomes
(2.2) [G :H] [N(H) :H] modp:
Because HC N(H), N(H)=H is a group.
When jHj = p
i
and i < k, the index [G : H] is divisible by p, so the congruence
(2.2) implies [N(H) : H] is divisible by p, so N(H)=H is a group with order divisible by
p. Thus N(H)=H has a subgroup of order p by Cauchy's theorem. All subgroups of the
quotient group N(H)=H have the form H
0
=H, where H
0
is a subgroup between H and
N(H). Therefore a subgroup of order p in N(H)=H is H
0
=H such that [H
0
: H] = p, so
jH
0
j =pjHj =p
i+1
.
Proof of Sylow II: Pick two p-Sylow subgroups P and Q. We want to show they are
conjugate.
Consider the action of Q on G=P by left multiplication. Since Q is a nite p-group,
jG=Pjj Fix
Q
(G=P )j modp:
The left side is [G : P ], which is nonzero modulo p since P is a p-Sylow subgroup. Thus
j Fix
Q
(G=P )j can't be 0, so there is a xed point in G=P . Call it gP . That is, qgP = gP
for all q2 Q. Equivalently, qg2 gP for all q2 Q, so Q gPg
1
. Therefore Q = gPg
1
,
since Q and gPg
1
have the same size.
Proof of Sylow III: We will prove n
p
 1 modp and then n
p
jm.
To show n
p
 1 modp, consider the action of P on the set Syl
p
(G) by conjugation. The
size of Syl
p
(G) is n
p
. Since P is a nite p-group,
n
p
jfxed pointsgj modp:
Fixed points forP acting by conjugation on Syl
p
(G) areQ2 Syl
p
(G) such thatgQg
1
=Q
for all g2 P . One choice for Q is P . For any such Q, P N(Q). Also Q N(Q), so P
andQ arep-Sylow subgroups in N(Q). Applying Sylow II to the group N(Q),P andQ are
conjugate in N(Q). Since QC N(Q), the only subgroup of N(Q) conjugate to Q is Q, so
P =Q. Thus P is the only xed point when P acts on Syl
p
(G), so n
p
 1 modp.
To show n
p
jm, consider the action of G by conjugation on Syl
p
(G). Since the p-Sylow
subgroups are conjugate to each other (Sylow II), there is one orbit. A set on which a group
acts with one orbit has size dividing the size of the group, so n
p
jjGj. From n
p
 1 modp,
the number n
p
is relatively prime to p, so n
p
jm.
Proof of Sylow III

: Let P be a p-Sylow subgroup of G and let G act on Syl
p
(G) by
conjugation. By the orbit-stabilizer formula,
n
p
=j Syl
p
(G)j = [G : Stab
fPg
]:
The stabilizer Stab
fPg
is
Stab
fPg
=fg :gPg
1
=Pg = N(P ):
Thus n
p
= [G : N(P )].
Read More
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FAQs on Sylow theorems - Group Theory, CSIR-NET Mathematical Sciences - Mathematics for IIT JAM, GATE, CSIR NET, UGC NET

1. What are the Sylow theorems in Group Theory?
Ans. The Sylow theorems are a set of results in Group Theory that provide information about the existence and properties of Sylow subgroups in finite groups. They are named after the Norwegian mathematician Ludwig Sylow. The theorems state that for any prime number p: 1. There exists at least one Sylow p-subgroup in any finite group. 2. All Sylow p-subgroups are conjugate to each other. 3. The number of Sylow p-subgroups divides the order of the group and is congruent to 1 modulo p. These theorems are powerful tools for understanding the structure of finite groups.
2. How can the Sylow theorems be used to determine the structure of a finite group?
Ans. The Sylow theorems play a crucial role in determining the structure of a finite group. By applying these theorems, one can determine the number of Sylow p-subgroups in a given group, their conjugacy classes, and their sizes. This information provides insight into the group's structure and helps in analyzing its properties. For example, if a group has only one Sylow p-subgroup for each prime p dividing the group's order, it implies that the group is a direct product of these Sylow subgroups. On the other hand, if a group has a unique Sylow p-subgroup for some prime p but multiple Sylow p-subgroups for another prime q, it indicates that the group has a non-trivial normal subgroup. In summary, the Sylow theorems enable mathematicians to investigate and classify finite groups based on their Sylow subgroups.
3. How can the Sylow theorems be used in solving CSIR-NET Mathematical Sciences exam questions?
Ans. The Sylow theorems are frequently tested in the CSIR-NET Mathematical Sciences exam, particularly in the Group Theory section. Questions related to the structure and properties of finite groups often involve the application of the Sylow theorems. To solve such questions, one must carefully read and understand the problem statement. Identify the relevant prime factors and use the Sylow theorems to deduce information about the Sylow subgroups. This information can then be used to determine the group's structure or answer specific questions about its properties. It is essential to practice solving various problems involving Sylow theorems to develop a good understanding of their applications and improve problem-solving skills for the CSIR-NET Mathematical Sciences exam.
4. Can the Sylow theorems be applied to infinite groups as well?
Ans. No, the Sylow theorems are specific to finite groups and cannot be directly applied to infinite groups. The theorems rely on the finiteness of the group to establish certain divisibility and congruence properties. However, some aspects of the Sylow theorems can be generalized to certain classes of infinite groups. For example, the Sylow's theorem on the conjugacy of Sylow subgroups can be extended to locally finite groups or certain classes of profinite groups. In general, the study of infinite groups requires different techniques and tools beyond the scope of the Sylow theorems.
5. Are there any alternative approaches or theorems related to Sylow's theorems in Group Theory?
Ans. Yes, there are alternative approaches and theorems related to Sylow's theorems that can be used in Group Theory. Some of these include: 1. Hall subgroups: Hall subgroups are a generalization of Sylow subgroups. They provide a similar framework for studying the structure of finite groups, particularly solvable groups. The Hall-Higman theorem is an important result in this context. 2. Transfer theory: Transfer theory is another technique used to study the structure of groups. It focuses on the transfer homomorphism, which allows for the transfer of information between subgroups. Theorems like the Schur-Zassenhaus theorem and the Frobenius theorem are examples of results obtained using transfer theory. These alternative approaches and theorems complement the Sylow theorems and provide additional tools for analyzing the structure and properties of groups in Group Theory.
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