Generalized symmetric group

In mathematics, the generalized symmetric group is the wreath product of the cyclic group of order m and the symmetric group of order n.

Examples

Representation theory

There is a natural representation of elements of as generalized permutation matrices, where the nonzero entries are m-th roots of unity:

The representation theory has been studied since (Osima 1954); see references in (Can 1996). As with the symmetric group, the representations can be constructed in terms of Specht modules; see (Can 1996).

Homology

The first group homology group (concretely, the abelianization) is (for m odd this is isomorphic to ): the factors (which are all conjugate, hence must map identically in an abelian group, since conjugation is trivial in an abelian group) can be mapped to (concretely, by taking the product of all the values), while the sign map on the symmetric group yields the These are independent, and generate the group, hence are the abelianization.

The second homology group (in classical terms, the Schur multiplier) is given by (Davies & Morris 1974):

Note that it depends on n and the parity of m: and which are the Schur multipliers of the symmetric group and signed symmetric group.

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.