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Abelian group

In abstract algebra, an abelian group is a group (G, *) that is commutative, i.e., in which a * b = b * a holds for all elements a and b in G. Abelian groups are named after Niels Henrik Abel.

If a group is abelian, we usually write the operation as + instead of *, the identity element as 0 (often called the zero element in this context) and the inverse of the element a as -a.

Examples of abelian groups include all cyclic groups such as the integers Z (with addition) and the integers modulo n Zn (also with addition). The real numbers form an abelian group with addition, as do the non-zero real numbers with multiplication. Every field gives rise to two abelian groups in the same fashion. Another important example is the factor group Q/Z, an injective cogenerator.

If n is a natural number and x is an element of an abelian group G, then nx can be defined as x + x + ... + x (n summands) and (-n)x = -(nx). In this way, G becomes a module over the ring Z of integers. In fact, the modules over Z can be identified with the abelian groups. Theorems about abelian groups can often be generalized to theorems about modules over principal ideal domains. An example is the classification of finitely generated abelian groups.

Any subgroup of an abelian group is normal, and hence factor groups can be formed freely. Subgroups, factor groups, products and direct sums of abelian groups are again abelian. If f, g : GH are two group homomorphisms between abelian groups, then their sum f+g, defined by (f+g)(x) = f(x) + g(x), is again a homomorphism. (This is not true if H is a non-abelian group). The set Hom(G, H) of all group homomorphisms from G to H thus turns into an abelian group in its own right.

The abelian groups, together with group homomorphisms, form a category, the prototype of an abelian category.

Somewhat akin to the dimension of vector spaces, every abelian group has a rank. It is defined as the cardinality of the largest set of linearly independent elements of the group. The integers and the rational numbers have rank one, as well as every subgroup of the rationals. While the rank one torsion-free abelian groups are well understood, even finite-rank abelian groups are not well understood. Infinite-rank abelian groups can be extremely complex and many open questions exist, often intimately connected to questions of set theory.

Many large abelian groups carry a natural topology, turning them into topological groups.



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