Group theory - Lagrange's theorem does not seem to hold As per Lagrange's theorem, the order of a s

Hayley Sanders

Hayley Sanders

Answered question

2022-05-19

Group theory - Lagrange's theorem does not seem to hold
As per Lagrange's theorem, the order of a subgroup must perfectly divide the order of the group.
Let us take the group G = ( S , ), where S = { 1 , 3 , 5 , 7 , 9 } and suggests multiplication mod 10. G is a group, with being O ( G ) = 5
Let us take a subset H = { 1 , 3 , 7 , 9 }, then ( H , ) is also a group as it is closed, associative, satisfies identity and inverse laws. Thus H is a subgroup of S. O ( H ) = 4. But I don't see Lagrange's theorem holding, as 4 does not divide 5.
Not sure if I'm making any silly mistake somewhere, would appreciate some help on this.

Answer & Explanation

rass1k6s

rass1k6s

Beginner2022-05-20Added 13 answers

Step 1
The original G is not a group: 5     5 = 25 mod 10 = 5
Step 2
If 5 had an inverse then by multiplying by 5 1 on both sides we get:
5 = ( 5 1     5 )     5 = 5 1     ( 5     5 ) = 5 1     5 = 1
Which is clearly not correct. Hence 5 doesn't have an inverse in G.

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