In
mathematics, in the field of
group theory, a
conjugate permutable subgroup is a
subgroup that commutes with all its conjugate subgroups. The term was introduced by
Tuval Foguel in 1996 and arose in the context of the proof that for finite groups, every
quasinormal subgroup is a
subnormal subgroup.
Clearly, every quasinormal subgroup is conjugate permutable.
In fact, it is true that for a finite group:
- Every maximal conjugate permutable subgroup is normal
- Every conjugate permutable subgroup is a conjugate permutable subgroup of every intermediate subgroup containing it.
- Combining the above two facts, every conjugate permutable subgroup is subnormal.
Conversely, every 2 subnormal subgroup (that is, a subgroup that is a normal subgroup of a normal subgroup) is conjugate permutable.
See also Quasinormal subgroup
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