p-groups of the same order are not necessarily
isomorphic; for example, the
cyclic group C4 and the
Klein four-group V4 are both 2-groups of order 4, but they are not isomorphic. Nor need a
p-group be
abelian; the
dihedral group Dih4 of order 8 is a non-abelian 2-group. However, every group of order
p2 is abelian. The dihedral groups are both very similar to and very dissimilar from the
quaternion groups and the
semidihedral groups. Together the dihedral, semidihedral, and quaternion groups form the 2-groups of
maximal class, that is those groups of order 2
n+1 and nilpotency class
n.
Iterated wreath products The iterated
wreath products of cyclic groups of order
p are very important examples of
p-groups. Denote the cyclic group of order
p as
W(1), and the wreath product of
W(
n) with
W(1) as
W(
n + 1). Then
W(
n) is the Sylow
p-subgroup of the
symmetric group Sym(
pn). Maximal
p-subgroups of the general linear group GL(
n,
Q) are direct products of various
W(
n). It has order
pk where
k = (
pn − 1)/(
p − 1). It has nilpotency class
pn−1, and its lower central series, upper central series, lower exponent-
p central series, and upper exponent-
p central series are equal. It is generated by its elements of order
p, but its exponent is
pn. The second such group,
W(2), is also a
p-group of maximal class, since it has order
pp+1 and nilpotency class
p, but is not a
regular p-group. Since groups of order
pp are always regular groups, it is also a minimal such example.
Generalized dihedral groups When
p = 2 and
n = 2,
W(
n) is the dihedral group of order 8, so in some sense
W(
n) provides an analogue for the dihedral group for all primes
p when
n = 2. However, for higher
n the analogy becomes strained. There is a different family of examples that more closely mimics the dihedral groups of order 2
n, but that requires a bit more setup. Let ζ denote a primitive
pth root of unity in the complex numbers, let
Z[ζ] be the ring of
cyclotomic integers generated by it, and let
P be the
prime ideal generated by 1−ζ. Let
G be a cyclic group of order
p generated by an element
z. Form the
semidirect product E(
p) of
Z[ζ] and
G where
z acts as multiplication by ζ. The powers
Pn are normal subgroups of
E(
p), and the example groups are
E(
p,
n) =
E(
p)/
Pn.
E(
p,
n) has order
pn+1 and nilpotency class
n, so is a
p-group of maximal class. When
p = 2,
E(2,
n) is the dihedral group of order 2
n. When
p is odd, both
W(2) and
E(
p,
p) are irregular groups of maximal class and order
pp+1, but are not isomorphic.
Unitriangular matrix groups The Sylow subgroups of
general linear groups are another fundamental family of examples. Let
V be a vector space of dimension
n with basis {
e1,
e2, ...,
en } and define
Vi to be the vector space generated by {
ei,
ei+1, ...,
en } for 1 ≤
i ≤
n, and define
Vi = 0 when
i >
n. For each 1 ≤
m ≤
n, the set of invertible linear transformations of
V which take each
Vi to
Vi+
m form a subgroup of Aut(
V) denoted
Um. If
V is a vector space over
Z/
pZ, then
U1 is a Sylow
p-subgroup of Aut(
V) = GL(
n,
p), and the terms of its
lower central series are just the
Um. In terms of matrices,
Um are those upper triangular matrices with 1s one the diagonal and 0s on the first
m−1 superdiagonals. The group
U1 has order
pn·(
n−1)/2, nilpotency class
n, and exponent
pk where
k is the least integer at least as large as the base
p logarithm of
n. ==Classification==