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Assume $φ:G⟶G'$ is a homomorphism from $G$ to $G'$.

prove:

if $|G|,|G'|$ is finite then: $o(φ(g) | (g.c.d(|G|,|G'|))$.

  • My proof:

φ is homomorphism so we know $o(φ(g))|o(g)$ & G is a group so $o(g)||G|$

From the transitivity of the division relation we can conclude $o(φ(g))|(|G|)$.

from obvious reason φ(g)∈G' and G' is a group so $o(φ(g))|(|G'|)$.

So far I have,

$o(φ(g))|(|G|)$

$o(φ(g))|(|G'|)$

but the next step, mean $o(φ(g)) | (g.c.d(|G|,|G'|))$, is somewhat un-clear to me.

how can this move be done ?

thank you!

Bill Dubuque
  • 272,048

1 Answers1

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never mind guys, here it is:

prove:

if a|b and a|c then a|gcd(b,c).


proof:

a|b so exist integer n such that an = b a|c so exist integer m such that am = c

define d = gcd(b,c).

then, exist integers x,y such that xb + yc = d.

then x(an) + y(am) = d

then a(xn + ym) = d

then a | d = gcd(b,c).

  • Please strive not to post more (dupe) answers to dupes of FAQs, cf. recent site policy announcement here. It's best for site health to delete this duplicate Q&A. – Bill Dubuque Oct 19 '23 at 17:51
  • i get an error: You cannot delete this question as others have invested time and effort into answering it. For more information, visit the help center. – hadadrefael Oct 22 '23 at 09:56
  • You need to first unaccept this answer then delete it. Then you can delete the quesiton. – Bill Dubuque Oct 23 '23 at 01:14