Knowee
Questions
Features
Study Tools

The intersection of two subgroups of a group is always a:a.Subgroupb.Supergroupc.Cosetd.Non-group

Question

The intersection of two subgroups of a group is always a:a.Subgroupb.Supergroupc.Cosetd.Non-group

🧐 Not the exact question you are looking for?Go ask a question

Solution

To determine the intersection of two subgroups of a group, we need to follow these steps:

  1. Identify the two subgroups of the given group.
  2. Find the elements that are common to both subgroups.
  3. Collect these common elements to form a new set.
  4. Check if this new set satisfies the four conditions to be a subgroup: a. Closure: For any two elements in the set, their product or composition must also be in the set. b. Identity: The set must contain the identity element of the group. c. Inverses: For every element in the set, its inverse must also be in the set. d. Associativity: The operation defined on the group must be associative.

If the new set satisfies all four conditions, then it is the intersection of the two subgroups and it is also a subgroup of the given group. Therefore, the answer is (a) Subgroup.

This problem has been solved

Similar Questions

A ∩ B ⊇ {2, 3} implies that {2, 3} ⊆ A and {2, 3} ⊆ B.Group startsTrue or FalseTrue, unselectedFalse, unselected

Which of the following is NOT a requirement for a subset to be a subgroup?a.It contains the identity element of the groupb.It is closed under the group operationc.It is closed under the inverse operationd.It is closed under addition

Any subgroup must have the identity element in it?Group of answer choicesTrueFalse

is divided into two cosets.One is left coset represented by and the other is right coset represented by.

Which of the following statements is TRUE about subgroups?a.Every group has only one subgroupb.Every subgroup is a groupc.Every subgroup contains only the identity elementd.Every group is a subgroup

1/1

Upgrade your grade with Knowee

Get personalized homework help. Review tough concepts in more detail, or go deeper into your topic by exploring other relevant questions.