Frattini subgroup

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Dih4.
In the second row are the maximal subgroups; their intersection (the Frattini subgroup) is the central element in the third row. So Dih4 has three non-generating elements beyond e.

In mathematics, particularly in group theory, the Frattini subgroup of a group G is the intersection of all maximal subgroups of G. For the case that G has no maximal subgroups, for example the trivial group {e} or a Prüfer group, it is defined by . It is analogous to the Jacobson radical in the theory of rings, and intuitively can be thought of as the subgroup of "small elements" (see the "non-generator" characterization below). It is named after Giovanni Frattini, who defined the concept in a paper published in 1885.[1]

Some facts

An example of a group with nontrivial Frattini subgroup is the cyclic group G of order , where p is prime, generated by a, say; here, .

See also

References

  • Hall, Marshall (1959). The Theory of Groups. New York: Macmillan. (See Chapter 10, especially Section 10.4.)