If a group
G has a
normal subgroup N, then the factor group
G/
N may be formed, and some aspects of the study of the structure of
G may be broken down by studying the "smaller" groups
G/N and
N. If
G has no normal subgroup that is different from
G and from the trivial group, then
G is a
simple group. Otherwise, the question naturally arises as to whether
G can be reduced to simple "pieces", and if so, whether there are any unique features of the way this can be done. More formally, a
composition series of a
group G is a
subnormal series of finite length :1 = H_0\triangleleft H_1\triangleleft \cdots \triangleleft H_n = G, with strict inclusions, such that each
Hi is a
maximal proper normal subgroup of
Hi+1. Equivalently, a composition series is a subnormal series such that each factor group
Hi+1 /
Hi is
simple. The factor groups are called
composition factors. A subnormal series is a composition series
if and only if it is of maximal length. That is, there are no additional subgroups which can be "inserted" into a composition series. The length
n of the series is called the
composition length. If a composition series exists for a group
G, then any subnormal series of
G can be
refined to a composition series, informally, by inserting subgroups into the series up to maximality. Every
finite group has a composition series, but not every
infinite group has one. For example, \mathbb{Z} has no composition series.
Uniqueness: Jordan–Hölder theorem A group may have more than one composition series. However, the
Jordan–Hölder theorem (named after
Camille Jordan and
Otto Hölder) states that any two composition series of a given group are equivalent. That is, they have the same composition length and the same composition factors,
up to permutation and
isomorphism. This theorem can be proved using the
Schreier refinement theorem. The Jordan–Hölder theorem is also true for
transfinite ascending composition series, but not transfinite
descending composition series . gives a short proof of the Jordan–Hölder theorem by intersecting the terms in one subnormal series with those in the other series.
Example For a
cyclic group of order
n, composition series correspond to ordered prime factorizations of
n, and in fact yields a proof of the
fundamental theorem of arithmetic. For example, the cyclic group C_{12} has C_1\triangleleft C_2\triangleleft C_6 \triangleleft C_{12}, \ \, C_1\triangleleft C_2\triangleleft C_4\triangleleft C_{12}, and C_1\triangleleft C_3\triangleleft C_6 \triangleleft C_{12} as three different composition series. The sequences of composition factors obtained in the respective cases are C_2,C_3,C_2, \ \, C_2,C_2,C_3, and C_3,C_2,C_2. ==For modules==