Pure subgroup
In mathematics, especially in the area of algebra studying the theory of abelian groups, a pure subgroup is a generalization of direct summand. It has found many uses in abelian group theory and related areas.
Definition
A subgroup of a group is said to be pure if whenever an element of has an root in, it necessarily has an root in. Formally:, the existence of an in G such that the existence of a in S such that.Origins
Pure subgroups are also called isolated subgroups or serving subgroups and were first investigated in Prüfer's 1923 paper, which described conditions for the decomposition of primary abelian groups as direct sums of cyclic groups using pure subgroups. The work of Prüfer was complemented by Kulikoff where many results were proved again using pure subgroups systematically. In particular, a proof was given that pure subgroups of finite exponent are direct summands. A more complete discussion of pure subgroups, their relation to infinite abelian group theory, and a survey of their literature is given in Irving Kaplansky's little red book.Properties
- Every direct summand of a group is a pure subgroup.
- Every pure subgroup of a pure subgroup is pure.
- A divisible subgroup of an abelian group is pure.
- If the quotient group is torsion-free, the subgroup is pure.
- The torsion subgroup of an abelian group is pure.
- The directed union of pure subgroups is a pure subgroup.