Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2010
Abstract
Many of the sporadic simple groups possess highly symmetric generating sets which can often be used to construct the groups, and which carry much information about their subgroup structure. We give a survey of results obtained so far.
Introduction and motivation
This paper is concerned with groups which are generated by highly symmetric subsets of their elements: that is to say by subsets of elements whose set normalizer within the group they generate acts on them by conjugation in a highly symmetric manner. Rather than investigate the behaviour of various known groups, we turn the procedure around and ask what groups can be generated by a set of elements which possesses certain assigned symmetries. It turns out that this approach enables us to define and construct by hand a large number of interesting groups—including many of the sporadic simple groups.
Accordingly we let m*n denote Cm*Cm* – *Cm, a free product of n copies of the cyclic group of order m. Let F = T0*T1* … *Tn−1 be such a group, with Ti = 〈ti〉 ≅ Cm. Certainly permutations of the set of symmetric generators T = {t0, t1, …, tn−1} induce automorphisms of F. Further automorphisms are given by raising a given ti to a power of itself coprime to m, while fixing the other symmetric generators. Together these generate the group M of monomial automorphisms of F which is a wreath product HrSn, where Hr is an abelian group of order r = Φ(m), the number of positive integers less than m and coprime to it.
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