, the symmetry group is the (rotational) icosahedral group of order 60, while the stabilizer of a single chosen tetrahedron is the (rotational)
tetrahedral group of order 12, and the orbit space (of order 60/12 = 5) is naturally identified with the 5 tetrahedra – the coset corresponds to the tetrahedron to which sends the chosen tetrahedron. Consider a group acting on a set . The '''' of an element in is the set of elements in to which can be moved by the elements of . The orbit of is denoted by : G{\cdot}x = \{ g{\cdot}x : g \in G \}. The defining properties of a group guarantee that the set of orbits of (points in) under the action of form a
partition of . The associated
equivalence relation is defined by saying
if and only if there exists a in with . The orbits are then the
equivalence classes under this relation; two elements and are equivalent if and only if their orbits are the same, that is, . The group action is
transitive if and only if it has exactly one orbit, that is, if there exists in with . This is the case if and only if for in (given that is non-empty). The set of all orbits of under the action of is written as (or, less frequently, as ), and is called the '
of the action. In geometric situations it may be called the ', while in algebraic situations it may be called the space of '''', and written , by contrast with the invariants (fixed points), denoted : the coinvariants are a while the invariants are a . The coinvariant terminology and notation are used particularly in
group cohomology and
group homology, which use the same superscript/subscript convention.
Invariant subsets If is a
subset of , then denotes the set . The subset is said to be
invariant under if (which is equivalent ). In that case, also operates on by
restricting the action to . The subset is called
fixed under if for all in and all in . Every subset that is fixed under is also invariant under , but not conversely. Every orbit is an invariant subset of on which acts
transitively. Conversely, any invariant subset of is a union of orbits. The action of on is
transitive if and only if all elements are equivalent, meaning that there is only one orbit. A
-invariant element of is such that for all . The set of all such is denoted and called the
-invariants of . When is a
-module, is the zeroth
cohomology group of with coefficients in , and the higher cohomology groups are the
derived functors of the
functor of -invariants.
Fixed points and stabilizer subgroups Given in and in with , it is said that " is a fixed point of " or that " fixes ". For every in , the '
of with respect to (also called the isotropy group or little group') is the set of all elements in that fix : G_x = \{g \in G : g{\cdot}x = x\}. This is a
subgroup of , though typically not a normal one. The action of on is
free if and only if all stabilizers are trivial. The kernel of the homomorphism with the symmetric group, , is given by the
intersection of the stabilizers for all in . If is trivial, the action is said to be faithful (or effective). Let and be two elements in , and let be a group element such that . Then the two stabilizer groups and are related by . Proof: by definition, if and only if . Applying to both sides of this equality yields ; that is, . An opposite inclusion follows similarly by taking and . The above says that the stabilizers of elements in the same orbit are
conjugate to each other. Thus, to each orbit, we can associate a
conjugacy class of a subgroup of (that is, the set of all conjugates of the subgroup). Let denote the conjugacy class of . Then the orbit has type if the stabilizer of some/any in belongs to . A maximal orbit type is often called a
principal orbit type.
Orbits and stabilizers are closely related. For a fixed in , consider the map given by . By definition the image of this map is the orbit . The condition for two elements to have the same image is f(g)=f(h) \iff g{\cdot}x = h{\cdot}x \iff g^{-1}h{\cdot}x = x \iff g^{-1}h \in G_x \iff h \in gG_x. In other words,
if and only if and lie in the same
coset for the stabilizer subgroup . Thus, the
fiber of over any in is contained in such a coset, and every such coset also occurs as a fiber. Therefore induces a between the set of cosets for the stabilizer subgroup and the orbit , which sends . This result is known as the
orbit–stabilizer theorem. If is finite then the orbit–stabilizer theorem, together with
Lagrange's theorem, gives |G \cdot x| = [G\,:\,G_x] = |G| / |G_x|. In other words, the length of the orbit of times the order of its stabilizer is the
order of the group. In particular that implies that the orbit length is a divisor of the group order. :
Example: Let be a group of prime order acting on a set with elements. Since each orbit has either or elements, there are at least orbits of length which are -invariant elements. More specifically, and the number of -invariant elements are congruent modulo . This result is especially useful since it can be employed for counting arguments (typically in situations where is finite as well). :
Example: We can use the orbit–stabilizer theorem to count the automorphisms of a
graph. Consider the
cubical graph as pictured, and let denote its
automorphism group. Then acts on the set of vertices , and this action is transitive as can be seen by composing rotations about the center of the cube. Thus, by the orbit–stabilizer theorem, . Applying the theorem now to the stabilizer , we can obtain . Any element of that fixes 1 must send 2 to either 2, 4, or 5. As an example of such automorphisms consider the rotation around the diagonal axis through 1 and 7 by , which permutes 2, 4, 5 and 3, 6, 8, and fixes 1 and 7. Thus, . Applying the theorem a third time gives . Any element of that fixes 1 and 2 must send 3 to either 3 or 6. Reflecting the cube at the plane through 1, 2, 7 and 8 is such an automorphism sending 3 to 6, thus . One also sees that consists only of the identity automorphism, as any element of fixing 1, 2 and 3 must also fix all other vertices, since they are determined by their adjacency to 1, 2 and 3. Combining the preceding calculations, we can now obtain .
Burnside's lemma A result closely related to the orbit–stabilizer theorem is
Burnside's lemma: |X/G|=\frac{1}\sum_{g\in G} |X^g|, where is the set of points fixed by . This result is mainly of use when and are finite, when it can be interpreted as follows: the number of orbits is equal to the average number of points fixed per group element. Fixing a group , the set of formal differences of finite -sets forms a ring called the
Burnside ring of , where addition corresponds to
disjoint union, and multiplication to
Cartesian product. == Examples ==