Assignment 2

Due May 5, 2000


1. Recall that the group of rigid motions of the tetrahedron and the alternating group A4 are isomorphic.

  1. What is the product of two rotations of order 3 about different axes? (Try rotations by the same angle and rotations by different angles).
  2. Verify your results algebraically.
  3. By finding a proper normal subgroup, show that A4 is not simple.
  4. In proving that A5 is simple, we used products of rotations of the dodecahedron. Why does a similar proof not work here?

2. Let R[x,y,z] be the set of real polynomials in three variables with the usual addition and multiplication. Then S3 acts on R[x,y,z] by permuting variables, for example if a = (132) then p(x,y,z)a = p(z,x,y) .

  1. Show that this is a group action.
  2. Show that for all p, q in R[x,y,z], and all a in S3, (p+q)a = pa + qa and (pq)a = pa qa.
  3. Find three elements of the kernel of the action, and describe this kernel.

3. Both GL(3,R) and O(3,R) act on R3 by right multiplication of row vectors. Let 0 not = v in R3 .

  1. Determine the fixing groups O(3,R)v and $GL(3,R)v .
  2. Determine the orbits of v under O(3,R) and GL(3,R).
  3. How many orbits do O(3,R) and GL(3,R) have?



  4. For solutions, see this page.

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     Last update May 7, 2000

     Author: Phill Schultz, schultz@maths.uwa.edu.au