In working on a paper, I found myself in the amusing but unusual situation of having a group , a subgroup
and an element
such that
This certainly can happen: the two obvious cases are when , or when
is an involution that happens to be in the normalizer
of
.
In fact the general case is just a tweak of this last case: we have if and only if
and
, or in other words, if
belongs to the normalizer, and is an involution modulo
.
This is of course easy to check. I then asked myself: what about the possibility that
,
where and
are arbitrary integers? Can one classify when this happens? The answer is another simple exercise (that I will probably use when I teach Algeba I next semester): this is the case if and only if
and
, where
is the gcd of
and
. In particular, for all pairs
where
and
are coprime, the condition above implies that
belongs to the normalizer of
.
Here is the brief argument: having fixed , let
This set is easily seen to be a subgroup of . Furthermore, note that
implies that
, which in turns means that
and
.
Hence if , we get
,
so that
contains , which is just
where . But
means exactly that
.
Thus we have got the first implication. Conversely, the conclusion means exactly that
But then
shows that .
To finish, how did I get to this situation? This can arise quite naturally as follows: one has a collection of representations
of a fixed group
, and an action of a group latex
on these representations
(action up to isomorphism really).
For a given representation , we can then define a group
and also a subset
where denotes the contragredient representation.
It can be that is empty, but let us assume it is not. Then
has two properties: (1) it is a coset of
(because
acts on
simply transitively); (2) we have
for all
(because the contragredient of the contragredient is the representation itself).
This means that, for some , we have
, and furthermore
since for all
.
By the previous discussion, we therefore get a good handle on the structure of : either it is empty, or it is of the form
for some
such that
and
normalizes
in
. In particular, if
is trivial (which happens often), either
is empty, or it consists of a single element
which is an involution of
.