An example of abstract group , and a common way to visualize it, is the group of
Euclidean plane isometries which keep the origin fixed. These groups form one of the two series of discrete
point groups in two dimensions. consists of
rotations of multiples of about the origin, and
reflections across lines through the origin, making angles of multiples of with each other. This is the
symmetry group of a
regular polygon with sides (for ; this extends to the cases and where we have a plane with respectively a point offset from the "center" of the "1-gon" and a "2-gon" or line segment). is
generated by a rotation of
order and a reflection of order 2 such that :\mathrm{srs} = \mathrm{r}^{-1} \, In geometric terms: in the mirror a rotation looks like an inverse rotation. In terms of
complex numbers: multiplication by e^{2\pi i \over n} and
complex conjugation. In matrix form, by setting : \mathrm{r}_1 = \begin{bmatrix} \cos{2\pi \over n} & -\sin{2\pi \over n} \\[4pt] \sin{2\pi \over n} & \cos{2\pi \over n} \end{bmatrix}\qquad \mathrm{s}_0 = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix} and defining \mathrm{r}_j = \mathrm{r}_1^j and \mathrm{s}_j = \mathrm{r}_j \, \mathrm{s}_0 for j \in \{1,\ldots,n-1\} we can write the product rules for D
n as :\begin{align} \mathrm{r}_j \, \mathrm{r}_k &= \mathrm{r}_{(j+k) \text{ mod }n} \\ \mathrm{r}_j \, \mathrm{s}_k &= \mathrm{s}_{(j+k) \text{ mod }n} \\ \mathrm{s}_j \, \mathrm{r}_k &= \mathrm{s}_{(j-k) \text{ mod }n} \\ \mathrm{s}_j \, \mathrm{s}_k &= \mathrm{r}_{(j-k) \text{ mod }n} \end{align} (Compare
coordinate rotations and reflections.) The dihedral group D2 is generated by the rotation r of 180 degrees, and the reflection s across the
x-axis. The elements of D2 can then be represented as {e, r, s, rs}, where e is the identity or null transformation and rs is the reflection across the
y-axis. D2 is
isomorphic to the
Klein four-group. For
n > 2 the operations of rotation and reflection in general do not
commute and D
n is not
abelian; for example, in
D4, a rotation of 90 degrees followed by a reflection yields a different result from a reflection followed by a rotation of 90 degrees. Thus, beyond their obvious application to problems of
symmetry in the plane, these groups are among the simplest examples of non-abelian groups, and as such arise frequently as easy counterexamples to theorems which are restricted to abelian groups. The elements of can be written as , , , ... , , , , , ... , . The first listed elements are rotations and the remaining elements are axis-reflections (all of which have order 2). The product of two rotations or two reflections is a rotation; the product of a rotation and a reflection is a reflection. So far, we have considered to be a
subgroup of , i.e. the group of rotations (about the origin) and reflections (across axes through the origin) of the plane. However, notation is also used for a subgroup of
SO(3) which is also of abstract group type : the
proper symmetry group of a
regular polygon embedded in three-dimensional space (if
n ≥ 3). Such a figure may be considered as a degenerate regular solid with its face counted twice. Therefore, it is also called a
dihedron (Greek: solid with two faces), which explains the name
dihedral group (in analogy to
tetrahedral,
octahedral and
icosahedral group, referring to the proper symmetry groups of a regular
tetrahedron,
octahedron, and
icosahedron respectively).
Examples of 2D dihedral symmetry File:Imperial Seal of Japan.svg|2D D16 symmetry – Imperial Seal of Japan, representing eightfold
chrysanthemum with sixteen
petals. File:Red Star of David.svg|2D D6 symmetry –
The Red Star of David File:Naval Jack of the Republic of China.svg|2D D12 symmetry — The Naval Jack of the Republic of China (White Sun) File:Ashoka Chakra.svg|2D D24 symmetry –
Ashoka Chakra, as depicted on the
National flag of the Republic of India. ==Properties==