Given a structured object
X of any sort, a
symmetry is a mapping of the object onto itself which preserves the structure. This occurs in many cases, for example • If
X is a set with no additional structure, a symmetry is a
bijective map from the set to itself, giving rise to permutation groups. • If the object
X is a set of points in the plane with its
metric structure or any other
metric space, a symmetry is a
bijection of the set to itself which preserves the distance between each pair of points (an
isometry). The corresponding group is called
isometry group of
X. • If instead
angles are preserved, one speaks of
conformal maps. Conformal maps give rise to
Kleinian groups, for example. • Symmetries are not restricted to geometrical objects, but include algebraic objects as well. For instance, the equation x^2-3=0 has the two solutions \sqrt{3} and -\sqrt{3}. In this case, the group that exchanges the two roots is the
Galois group belonging to the equation. Every polynomial equation in one variable has a Galois group, that is a certain permutation group on its roots. The axioms of a group formalize the essential aspects of
symmetry. Symmetries form a group: they are
closed because if you take a symmetry of an object, and then apply another symmetry, the result will still be a symmetry. The identity keeping the object fixed is always a symmetry of an object. Existence of inverses is guaranteed by undoing the symmetry and the associativity comes from the fact that symmetries are functions on a space, and composition of functions is associative.
Frucht's theorem says that every group is the symmetry group of some
graph. So every abstract group is actually the symmetries of some explicit object. The saying of "preserving the structure" of an object can be made precise by working in a
category. Maps preserving the structure are then the
morphisms, and the symmetry group is the
automorphism group of the object in question. ==Applications of group theory== Applications of group theory abound. Almost all structures in
abstract algebra are special cases of groups.
Rings, for example, can be viewed as
abelian groups (corresponding to addition) together with a second operation (corresponding to multiplication). Therefore, group theoretic arguments underlie large parts of the theory of those entities.
Galois theory Galois theory uses groups to describe the symmetries of the roots of a polynomial (or more precisely the automorphisms of the algebras generated by these roots). The
fundamental theorem of Galois theory provides a link between
algebraic field extensions and group theory. It gives an effective criterion for the solvability of polynomial equations in terms of the solvability of the corresponding
Galois group. For example,
S5, the
symmetric group in 5 elements, is not solvable which implies that the general
quintic equation cannot be solved by radicals in the way equations of lower degree can. The theory, being one of the historical roots of group theory, is still fruitfully applied to yield new results in areas such as
class field theory.
Algebraic topology Algebraic topology is another domain which prominently
associates groups to the objects the theory is interested in. There, groups are used to describe certain invariants of
topological spaces. They are called "invariants" because they are defined in such a way that they do not change if the space is subjected to some
deformation. For example, the
fundamental group "counts" how many paths in the space are essentially different. The
Poincaré conjecture, proved in 2002/2003 by
Grigori Perelman, is a prominent application of this idea. The influence is not unidirectional, though. For example, algebraic topology makes use of
Eilenberg–MacLane spaces which are spaces with prescribed
homotopy groups. Similarly
algebraic K-theory relies in a way on
classifying spaces of groups. Finally, the name of the
torsion subgroup of an infinite group shows the legacy of topology in group theory. .
Algebraic geometry Algebraic geometry likewise uses group theory in many ways.
Abelian varieties have been introduced above. The presence of the group operation yields additional information which makes these varieties particularly accessible. They also often serve as a test for new conjectures. (For example the
Hodge conjecture (in certain cases).) The one-dimensional case, namely
elliptic curves is studied in particular detail. They are both theoretically and practically intriguing. In another direction,
toric varieties are
algebraic varieties acted on by a
torus. Toroidal embeddings have recently led to advances in
algebraic geometry, in particular
resolution of singularities.
Algebraic number theory Algebraic number theory makes uses of groups for some important applications. For example,
Euler's product formula, : \begin{align} \sum_{n\geq 1}\frac{1}{n^s}& = \prod_{p \text{ prime}} \frac{1}{1-p^{-s}}, \\ \end{align} \! captures
the fact that any integer decomposes in a unique way into
primes. The failure of this statement for
more general rings gives rise to
class groups and
regular primes, which feature in
Kummer's treatment of
Fermat's Last Theorem.
Harmonic analysis Analysis on Lie groups and certain other groups is called
harmonic analysis.
Haar measures, that is, integrals invariant under the translation in a Lie group, are used for
pattern recognition and other
image processing techniques.
Combinatorics In
combinatorics, the notion of
permutation group and the concept of group action are often used to simplify the counting of a set of objects; see in particular
Burnside's lemma.
Music The presence of the 12-
periodicity in the
circle of fifths yields applications of
elementary group theory in
musical set theory.
Transformational theory models musical transformations as elements of a mathematical group.
Physics In
physics, groups are important because they describe the symmetries which the laws of physics seem to obey. According to
Noether's theorem, every continuous symmetry of a physical system corresponds to a
conservation law of the system. Physicists are very interested in group representations, especially of Lie groups, since these representations often point the way to the "possible" physical theories. Examples of the use of groups in physics include the
Standard Model,
gauge theory, the
Lorentz group, and the
Poincaré group. Group theory can be used to resolve the incompleteness of the statistical interpretations of mechanics developed by
Willard Gibbs, relating to the summing of an infinite number of probabilities to yield a meaningful solution.
Chemistry and materials science In
chemistry and
materials science,
point groups are used to classify regular polyhedra, and the
symmetries of molecules, and
space groups to classify
crystal structures. The assigned groups can then be used to determine physical properties (such as
chemical polarity and
chirality), spectroscopic properties (particularly useful for
Raman spectroscopy,
infrared spectroscopy, circular dichroism spectroscopy, magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy, UV/Vis spectroscopy, and fluorescence spectroscopy), and to construct
molecular orbitals.
Molecular symmetry is responsible for many physical and spectroscopic properties of compounds and provides relevant information about how chemical reactions occur. In order to assign a point group for any given molecule, it is necessary to find the set of symmetry operations present on it. The symmetry operation is an action, such as a rotation around an axis or a reflection through a mirror plane. In other words, it is an operation that moves the molecule such that it is indistinguishable from the original configuration. In group theory, the rotation axes and mirror planes are called "symmetry elements". These elements can be a point, line or plane with respect to which the symmetry operation is carried out. The symmetry operations of a molecule determine the specific point group for this molecule. In
chemistry, there are five important symmetry operations. They are identity operation (
E), rotation operation or proper rotation ('
Cn
), reflection operation (σ), inversion (i) and rotation reflection operation or improper rotation (Sn
). The identity operation (E) consists of leaving the molecule as it is. This is equivalent to any number of full rotations around any axis. This is a symmetry of all molecules, whereas the symmetry group of a chiral molecule consists of only the identity operation. An identity operation is a characteristic of every molecule even if it has no symmetry. Rotation around an axis (Cn'''
) consists of rotating the molecule around a specific axis by a specific angle. It is rotation through the angle 360°/n
, where n'' is an integer, about a rotation axis. For example, if a
water molecule rotates 180° around the axis that passes through the
oxygen atom and between the
hydrogen atoms, it is in the same configuration as it started. In this case, , since applying it twice produces the identity operation. In molecules with more than one rotation axis, the Cn axis having the largest value of n is the highest order rotation axis or principal axis. For example in
boron trifluoride (BF3), the highest order of rotation axis is
C3, so the principal axis of rotation is
C3. In the reflection operation (
σ) many molecules have mirror planes, although they may not be obvious. The reflection operation exchanges left and right, as if each point had moved perpendicularly through the plane to a position exactly as far from the plane as when it started. When the plane is perpendicular to the principal axis of rotation, it is called '
σh
(horizontal). Other planes, which contain the principal axis of rotation, are labeled vertical (σv
) or dihedral (σd'''''). Inversion (i ) is a more complex operation. Each point moves through the center of the molecule to a position opposite the original position and as far from the central point as where it started. Many molecules that seem at first glance to have an inversion center do not; for example,
methane and other
tetrahedral molecules lack inversion symmetry. To see this, hold a methane model with two hydrogen atoms in the vertical plane on the right and two hydrogen atoms in the horizontal plane on the left. Inversion results in two hydrogen atoms in the horizontal plane on the right and two hydrogen atoms in the vertical plane on the left. Inversion is therefore not a symmetry operation of methane, because the orientation of the molecule following the inversion operation differs from the original orientation. And the last operation is improper rotation or rotation reflection operation ('
Sn'''
) requires rotation of 360°/n'', followed by reflection through a plane perpendicular to the axis of rotation.
Cryptography Z26 underlies
Caesar's cipher. Very large groups of prime order constructed in
elliptic curve cryptography serve for
public-key cryptography. Cryptographical methods of this kind benefit from the flexibility of the geometric objects, hence their group structures, together with the complicated structure of these groups, which make the
discrete logarithm very hard to calculate. One of the earliest encryption protocols,
Caesar's cipher, may also be interpreted as a (very easy) group operation. Most cryptographic schemes use groups in some way. In particular
Diffie–Hellman key exchange uses finite
cyclic groups. So the term
group-based cryptography refers mostly to
cryptographic protocols that use infinite
non-abelian groups such as a
braid group. ==See also==