If $A$ and $B$ are finite subgroups, of orders $m$ and $n$, respectively, of the abelian group $G$, Prove that $AB$ is a subgroup of order $mn$ if $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime. Definition: $AB=\{ab|a\in A, b\in B \}$
My attemptation: $A$ has $m$ elements, $B$ has $n$ elements. There are $mn$ representations of elements in $AB$. If some of them are equal or there exist $a,a'\in A, b, b'\in B$ such that $ab=a'b'$, then $AB$ has elements less than $mn$, if such elements do not exist then $AB$ has order of $mn$. Therefore we want to show that if $m$ and $n$ are relatively prime then such elements do not exist. Please show me how to do it. I think it has something to do with Lagrange's theorem and properties of prime numbers.
$|AB| = \frac{|A| \cdot |B|}{|A \cap B|}$ By what?
– pxc3110 Apr 08 '14 at 06:50