If
h is a translation, then its conjugation by an isometry can be described as applying the isometry to the translation: • the conjugation of a translation by a translation is the first translation • the conjugation of a translation by a rotation is a translation by a rotated translation vector • the conjugation of a translation by a reflection is a translation by a reflected translation vector Thus the
conjugacy class within the
Euclidean group E(
n) of a translation is the set of all translations by the same distance. The smallest subgroup of the Euclidean group containing all translations by a given distance is the set of
all translations. So, this is the
conjugate closure of a
singleton containing a translation. Thus
E(
n) is a
direct product of the
orthogonal group O(
n) and the subgroup of translations
T, and
O(
n) is isomorphic with the
quotient group of
E(
n) by
T: :
O(
n) \cong
E(
n)
/ T Thus there is a
partition of the Euclidean group with in each subset one isometries that keeps the origins fixed, and its combination with all translations. Each isometry is given by an
orthogonal matrix A in
O(
n) and a vector
b: :x \mapsto Ax+ b and each subset in the quotient group is given by the matrix
A only. Similarly, for the special orthogonal group
SO(
n) we have :
SO(
n) \cong
E+(
n)
/ T ==Inversion==