The
group homology of the alternating groups exhibits stabilization, as in
stable homotopy theory: for sufficiently large
n, it is constant. However, there are some low-dimensional exceptional homology. Note that the
homology of the symmetric group exhibits similar stabilization, but without the low-dimensional exceptions (additional homology elements).
H1: Abelianization The first
homology group coincides with
abelianization, and (since A
n is
perfect, except for the cited exceptions) is thus: :
H1(A
n, Z) = Z1 for
n = 0, 1, 2; :
H1(A3, Z) = A = A3 = Z3; :
H1(A4, Z) = A = Z3; :
H1(A
n, Z) = Z1 for
n ≥ 5. This is easily seen directly, as follows. A
n is generated by 3-cycles – so the only non-trivial abelianization maps are since order-3 elements must map to order-3 elements – and for all 3-cycles are conjugate, so they must map to the same element in the abelianization, since conjugation is trivial in abelian groups. Thus a 3-cycle like (123) must map to the same element as its inverse (321), but thus must map to the identity, as it must then have order dividing 2 and 3, so the abelianization is trivial. For , A
n is trivial, and thus has trivial abelianization. For A3 and A4 one can compute the abelianization directly, noting that the 3-cycles form two conjugacy classes (rather than all being conjugate) and there are non-trivial maps (in fact an isomorphism) and .
H2: Schur multipliers The
Schur multipliers of the alternating groups A
n (in the case where
n is at least 5) are the cyclic groups of order 2, except in the case where
n is either 6 or 7, in which case there is also a triple cover. In these cases, then, the Schur multiplier is (the cyclic group) of order 6. These were first computed in . :
H2(A
n, Z) = Z1 for
n = 1, 2, 3; :
H2(A
n, Z) = Z2 for
n = 4, 5; :
H2(A
n, Z) = Z6 for
n = 6, 7; :
H2(A
n, Z) = Z2 for
n ≥ 8. == Notes ==