If N is normal in G, show Z_{i}(G) \frac{N}{N} \leq

Shayla Lyons

Shayla Lyons

Answered question

2022-02-13

If N is normal in G, show Zi(G)NNZi(GN) where Zi(G) is the i-th term in the upper central series for G.

Answer & Explanation

bubble53zjr

bubble53zjr

Beginner2022-02-14Added 14 answers

As you note, if K is a group, then showing that xZi+1(K) is equivalent to showing that [x,y]Zi(K) for all yK.
You are assuming that Zi(G)NNZi(GN). You want to prove that Zi+1(G)NNZi+1(GN). That means that you want to show that for all xZi+1(G),[xN,yN]Zi(GN) for all yNGN.
So, let xZi+1G. We want to show that xNZi+1(GN).
Let yG be arbitrary. Then [xN,yN]=[x,y]NGN.
If xZi+1(G),then [x,y]Zi(G), so [xN,yN]=[x,y]NZi(G)N.But Zi(G)N. But Zi(G)NNZi(GN) by the induction hypothesis, so [xN,yN]Zi(GN).
As this holds for all yNGN, it follows that xNZi+1(GN), as required.

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