Almost simple group

From HandWiki

In mathematics, a group is said to be almost simple if it contains a non-abelian simple group and is contained within the automorphism group of that simple group – that is, if it fits between a (non-abelian) simple group and its automorphism group. In symbols, a group A is almost simple if there is a (non-abelian) simple group S such that SAAut(S).

Examples

  • Trivially, non-abelian simple groups and the full group of automorphisms are almost simple, but proper examples exist, meaning almost simple groups that are neither simple nor the full automorphism group.
  • For n=5 or n7, the symmetric group Sn is the automorphism group of the simple alternating group An, so Sn is almost simple in this trivial sense.
  • For n=6 there is a proper example, as S6 sits properly between the simple A6 and Aut(A6), due to the exceptional outer automorphism of A6. Two other groups, the Mathieu group M10 and the projective general linear group PGL2(9) also sit properly between A6 and Aut(A6).

Properties

The full automorphism group of a non-abelian simple group is a complete group (the conjugation map is an isomorphism to the automorphism group), but proper subgroups of the full automorphism group need not be complete.

Structure

By the Schreier conjecture, now generally accepted as a corollary of the classification of finite simple groups, the outer automorphism group of a finite simple group is a solvable group. Thus a finite almost simple group is an extension of a solvable group by a simple group.

See also

Notes