126 90 4MB
English Pages 136 [132] Year 1971
Moyatefoyam\it-laatclaar-haler=] mexeyer(=18\ Lecture Note Series
|
.
Finite Groups of Automorphisms ~ NORMAN BIGGS
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY
'
PRES
see NET IN U.K.
i IN U.S.A
London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series.
Finite Groups of Automorphisms Course given at the University of Southampton, October-December
NORMAN
1969.
BIGGS
Royal Holloway College University of London
CAMBRIDGE AT THE
UNIVERSITY
PRESS
1971
6
Published by The Syndics of the Cambridge University Press Bentley House,
200 Euston Road,
American Branch:
©
London N. W. 1
32 East 57th Street,
New York,
Cambridge University Press 1971
Library of Congress Catalogue Card No. : 74-154510 ISBN:
0 521 08215 3
Printed offset in Great Britain by Alden and Mowbray Ltd at the Alden Press,
Oxford
N. Y. 10022
-
Contents
Page Introduction
l.
Permutation groups se i
el at a i
2.
iii
Preliminary definitions
2
Counting principles
3
Transitivity
4
Applications to group theory
bs)
Primitivity
6
Regular normal subgroups
oy oO We
dd
Geometry of finite spaces
19
Ze 1
Introduction
1
ae
Finite fields
21
le?
Finite vector spaces
22
2.-4
The structure of GL(V) and
205
Projective spaces and projective groups
oe
2.6
Miscellaneous
om
SL(V)
results on projective spaces
rae | The classical simple groups
3.
26
42
48
Designs Four fundamental problems
48
Designs
a
The type of a design
55
Symmetric
SS)
designs
Automorphisms
and extensions of designs
60 64
The Mathieu groups INS ee HS (Gy) os eS} 5 The transitivity problem SOS Noe SESS ROSS
i
69
4.
Linear graphs
71
4.1
Definitions and examples
Vi
4,2
Regular graphs
74
4.3
Graphs and permutation groups
82
4.4
Distance-transitive graphs
4.5
Distance-transitive graphs of diameter 2
—
86
4.6
Graphs with no triangles
102
4.7
Conclusion
109
96
Appendix
110
Guide to the literature
LTS
Index
116
ii
a
Introduction
These are the notes of lectures given at the University of Southampton,
October-December
1969.
The lectures were intended
for research students working in areas related to the topics discussed,
and for mathematicians working in other fields who
were interested in hearing a survey of some current problems and their background. I have tried to retain the character introducing occasional
of the lectures by
'philosophical' remarks,
the text free of references,
as far as possible.
and I have kept There is a short
survey of the literature at the end, and all the main sources are mentioned there. I thank David Sands who took the original notes,
and
Dr David Kirby who read the manuscript with great care and pointed out several errors and omissions.
Southampton
Norman
January 1970
iii
Biggs
St sates iat om nts‘hae mo
bith v180 feere Hitw
|
4 :
1. Permutation Groups
',.. it will afford me much satisfaction if, by means of this book, I shall succeed in arousing interest among English mathematicians in a branch of pure mathematics which becomes the more fascinating the more it is studied. W. Burnside, in his preface to Theory of groups of finite order, 1897.
11
Preliminary definitions
It is presumed that the reader will already be familiar with the contents of this section;
he is advised to read it quickly in
order to accustom himself to the notation which will be used hereafter. If X a:X > X;
is afinite set, a permutation of X
two such permutations
give the permutation (x)@£ = ((x)a@)8.
S,,,
Under this operation the permutations the symmetric group on
5 Py ieee aesoe cere let S.= Sy; so that
A permutation group is atriple set,
f can be composed to
That is, we write functions on the right and com-
form a group
oe
and
af:X ~ X, which here will be defined by
pose in the natural order. of X
@
is a bijection
G
(X, G, i) where
X.
If
Is. =n!
X is a finite
is an abstract finite group and
i:G —- Sy is a homomor-
phism.
In practice we usually identify
G
we say
G acts on
X, or,
G
with its image in Sy
has a permutation representation
in X, and we refer to the permutation group important case when
i:G > S,, is xX
(X, G).
a monomorphism
In the
we speak of a
(X, G)
The degree of
faithful permutation representation.
is
[x|. a [F@ly Zlel=" £66
1.3.6.
Proposition.
is divisible by
Proof.
n(n- 1)...
|G|
FY TF@!*.
geG
If (X, G) is k-transitive, then (n-k+1)
where
n=
|G|
|x|.
=n/|G_| xX n(n - 1)|(G, )§ liane ee
n(n
ries
(n-k+1)|G
pihiy
eo //
if |G| =n(n- 1)... (n- k +1) then we say that (X, G) is exactly (or sharply) k-transitive; (X, G)
is regular.
X
G
and
x, € X,
if
Ic| =n=
|x|
we say that
In the latter case it is often useful to identify
under the bijection
x +> 8
where for some fixed
(x 8, ae Our first examples of k-transitive groups with
the alternating and symmetric
1.3.7.
(ii)
Proposition.
groups.
(i)
AL is (n-2)-transitive.
s, is n-transitive.
k > 1 are
Proof.
when
The first part is obvious.
In the alternating case,
n= 3, A,= (Ai ZB), (132) }, which is 1-transitive, so
we can formulate a proof by recursion, 1. 3.5 and the fact that the stabilizer
using the remark after (An
is ALi
that AL cannot be more than (n-2)-transitive, permutation of tuple?
{1, 2, ...,
n}
To show
notice that any
which takes the ordered (n-1)-
(1, 02, 0s4 4,!ms2) n-L)yto >(1,2, cee, n=2, n)omustitake
to n- 1 and so is the odd permutation
(n - 1, n), which is not
in A.
// Examples
abundant; for
n
of k-transitive groups with
k>
2 are not
in fact it is thought that there may be an upper bound
k, if we exclude the symmetric
this is a very deep subject,
and alternating groups.
But
and almost nothing is known for certain.
The most highly transitive groups constructed so far which are not symmetric
or alternating are the Mathieu groups
which are 5-transitive; stabilizers
M,,
and
M,,
and
M,,
apart from these and their respective M,,
which are 4-transitive,
permutation groups are not more than 3-transitive.
all other known One of the
incidental aims of this course of lectures is to construct these highly transitive groups.
1.4
Applications to group theory
An abstract group
G
acts on the set
26 of subsets of G
in two especially important ways:
(i) (ii)
(K)g= Keg, (K)g=¢ Ke;
where
geG,
KCG.
Many notions and theorems
quotient being the index
of cosets.
or the number
|G: H|
lal, the
divides
|H|
1. 2. 3 gives Lagrange's theorem that
Thus
itself.
H
is
H
in G, and the stabilizer of
cosets of H
consists of the right
H
then the orbit of
(H a
is a prime
Now the set
re a, € ZW has an additive
ah a4)»
structure in which addition i performed coordinate-wise, when
n
is aprime
ture which makes
(a; Ay sees in the ring
p, this set may be given a multiplicative struc-
it a field.
a7)
and again
This is done by identifying the sequence
with the polynomial
a tajtt...
Zt), choosing a polynomial
which is irreducible over
Z_
f(t) € Zt]
Bo
Sito
of degree
r
(that is, has no zeros in Z)) and
defining multiplication to be polynomial multiplication in Zt] followed by reduction modulo
sequence
(0, 1, 0, ...,
f(t).
The polynomial
t (or the
0)) has the property that the elements of
the field, which is called GF(p'), can be written
For example,
irreducible over
to construct
Z, =
GF(3°)
1Oci1,243-thus
note that
GF(3")
t° + 2t+2
is
may be listed as
follows:
reduction:
Sequencese
0
t
t
0
t
to
t3 Lee
t*
ie & te
2
ots
Y2tsh2
t!
1°
mut ¢,
of
Let F
be afinite field.
That
in, ¢ ¢-F
A
m0,
c=x,
x=>m.0+c,
m=y-x
formation taking
23
in F.
F.
is a group (under composition) is immediate
It acts exactly 2-transitively on equations
A
F
is a group which acts exactly 2-transitively on
Proof.
The set
F
y=m.1+c Thatis,
0, 1 to x, y.
since,
given
havea
x, y in
F
the
unique solution
there is a unique affine trans//
Finite vector spaces
We write
V=
V(n, q) for a vector space of dimension
22
n
a over
GF(q);
V
has
q° elements.
Our aim is to use standard
techniques of linear algebra to define structures of geometrical and combinatorial
2.3.1. is apair s:V - V
interest.
Definition.
(s, @) where
A semilinear automorphism of V(n, q)
a
is an automorphism
F = GF(q)
and
alone as the semilinear automorphism,
and
isa permutation of V
satisfying:
(x + y)s = (x)s + (y)s, (A.x)s = (A)a. (x)s,
We usually refer to
s
forall
forall
call
q@ its companion automorphism.
that
s_
x,
yeV;
Ae F,
xeV.
If a
is the identity we say
is linear.
Choosing a basis points
of
le, _ o. e,} for V we can identify n
x of V with row vectors
(x,, —.
x)» where
x= ) Xe. , =]!
and each
x, € F;
similarly a linear automorphism
specified by its action on the basis,
nXn
matrix
L= (255) over
and we identify
J of V
is
2 with the
F, where
n (e.)2 =
) l..e
j=1 V4
If we had chosen a different basis is a unique linear automorphism
oa lft re
if, , bas i. for V_ then there h of V_ such that
(e,)h = f. :
it aS (h,.) is the matrix representing
respect to the basis
le, oe
respect to the new basis
ae e
then
if, , epee i
23
h with
2 is represented with
by the matrix
HLH™?.
Thus the determinant of a linear automorphism
2
is unimodular.
q),
TL(n,
GL(n,
q),
linear,
TL(V),
are denoted by
If V = V(n, q) we also use the nota-
respectively.
GL(V), SL(V)
of V
automorphisms
and unimodular
TL(V);
The groups of all semilinear,
Definition.
2.3.2.
tions
we say
if det / =1
the determinant of any representative matrix; that
may be defined as
SL(n, q).
SL(V) g
We show
GL(V)
j IL(V)
>
;
AutF
1 J SL(V) > GL(V)«> F*, is the multiplicative group of
F.
i Proof.
(A short exact sequence
another way of stating that consequently
i:A—~B
>
j B
companion automorphism
j:TL(V) > Aut F of s.
A;
by letting
(s)j be the
It is routine to check that
j is an
and its kernel is the group of semilinear automor-
Part (ii) is similar,
Ww!:
is just
j is an epimorphism with kernel
phisms with the identity companion automorphism,
2.3.4.
=> C
is the inclusion monomorphism. )
In part (i) define
epimorphism,
A
defining
that is,
(2)j = det l.
Proposition.
Sener
tage gtaleyigh wa = 4M. @h- a = qrin- P72
n+, i (aq a resail|
24
GL/(V). pd
(ii)
|SL(, a)| =4
ie 2 n(n-1) /2 tl Pe Pe i=2
(iii)
|TL(, p™)| = rl/GL@, p*)] .
Proof. if, , rari i
For each pair of ordered bases le,, n. ew} of V=V(n, q) there is a unique 2 € GL(V) such
that (e)2 =f, i=1, .1 of ordered bases
of
V.
,» n.
1 ways;
GL(V)
is equal to the number
Now the first member
may be any element of V q” -
Thus
except
of an ordered basis
0 and so may be chosen in
the second element must not be linearly dependent
on the first and so can be chosen in q: - q ways, the formula for
GL(V).
This gives
The formulae in parts (ii) and (iii) follow
by applying 2. 3. 2 and recalling that
when
etc.
|Fx | =q =I
| Aut F| a od
F = GF(p’).
Tf
Before proceeding to a detailed study of the structure of GL(V)
and
SL(V)
we make some informal remarks.
linear automorphism
of V
properties of GL(V)
is confined to its actionon
GL(V)
is transitive on
V*
fixes
0
Since every
our interest in the transitivity
V*=V-
since any two elements of V*
chosen as the initial members
of two ordered bases;
{0}. may be
it is not in
general 2-transitive because there is no linear automorphism taking an independent pair to a dependent pair. p prime,
we can see that linear automorphisms
with group automorphisms that is,
(Z,)”.
results 1. 6. 3-5:
When of V
V = V(n, p), are identical
of the underlying abelian group of V,
Thus we have a geometrical
in particular,
over the field
interpretation
of the
GF(2) = Z, two
different nonzero points in a vector space are always independent, so that in this case we may expect doubly transitive groups of automorphisms.
25
2.4
The structure of GL(V)
and
SL(V)
We shall suppose for the remainder dim
V=n=
2. A
of this chapter that
(linear) subspace of V(n, q) of dimension
contains
Gea points;
in particular a subspace of dimension
contains
fina points and is called a hyperplane.
trivial linear functional
U=
on
V
has equation
Wewrite
(x, u) for
(x, u) = 0; if (x, u)=0
(x, u) = A(x, v) forall (U)Z
x eV.
II {xev
2.4.1.
and
xu
(x, v)=0
U
are both
2X € F*
we have
If 2 is a linear automorphism of
where
and
(y, u) —0}
| («i7', w=0)}.
Definition.
A linear automorphism
called a transvection if for some hyperplane
Gia
Xtee x
if. x. €.U..
(ii)
xT-x€U
1S
U
in V
only
these parallel to the hyperplane
we might just as well write the second condition as Transvections
7 of V we have
qn - aos U;
of course,
xtT- x €U
are useful because in fact they move
every point in a fixed direction,
and so may be specified by a
26
is
UL
Thus a transvection in V(n, q) moves and it moves
and say that
then for some
is also a hyperplane in V
(U)t = {x eV |x=yl,
all x¢«V.
is a non-
then the set
equations of the same hyperplane,
points,
n - 1
{xeV|xu=0}
is a hyperplane in V.
V, the set
If u
m
for
re simple formula;
this is a consequence
of linearity,
as we now
show.
2.4.2.
Lemma.
U_ which has equation
If 7 isa transvection with hyperplane
(x, u) = 0 then there is some
ae€U=
such
that xT=x-
(x, ula
Proof.
Choose
forall
b ¢U
c= (b, u) b;
xeV.
and let
a=cr-c.
Then for all x € V we have
(x %
(x,
so that, since x - (x, ujc,
u)(b,
u)’b,
u) en)
7 fixes all points of U and x - (x, u)(b, u) 7 fixes
xT - x= =
x - (x, u)c.
b=
Thus
(x, u) [cT- ¢] (x, uja :
We shall write
7=
//
ee
for the transvection given by the
formula
Xt~>x - (x, uja and remember different pairs
that the same transvection can be given by many u, a.
We notice that since
at
a ¢«U
we have
(a, u) = 0, and also we have the following identities;
(Gj)
7? a
ii)
Tu,a'u,b~ ‘u,atb’
U8
ae A
The set of all transvections
Proposition.
2.4.4.
provided
a+b
V
of
#0.
is
a complete conjugacy class in GL(V).
Proof.
If T=
es,
and
h € GL(V)
then
(x)h +th= [xh”* - (xh™*, wah =
Thus
hth
(xh,
is a transvection
equation of the hyperplane suppose
T=
hyperplanes
u)ah
Ta U
and
U'
ea
(U)h
ange
.
where
and
Ty" a'
(x, v)=0
a'= ah.
isan
Conversely,
are two transvections,
respectively.
Choose
with
f ¢U, f' €U',
such that (f, u) = (f', u')=1, and select bases {a, b, ..., e} of U- and*-{a', Botte’ | “of OUT Thenetiaminem 2 te. Feed {a', b', ..., e', f'} are bases for V; consequently we may find h e GL(V)
such that
ah=a',
bh=b',...,
fh=f'.
is a transvection by the first part of the proof, been given.
(xh? ,
In order to show that
u) = (x, u') forall
has been arranged, and
(x, u')=0
x=f
gives
and its formula has
ah=a'.
The latter condition
(U)h= U' we know that
are both equations of the hyperplane
(xh”*, u) = A(x, u') for some }=1
A € F*
as required.
ho th
hth = T' we require that
x eV, and
and since
Now
andall
(xh *, u)=0 U'.
Thus
x« V, and putting is
28
This explicit knowledge of one complete conjugacy class in
GL(V)
enables us to deduce many properties of GL(V)
and
SL(V), especially properties connected with the normal structure. In what follows we shall have to assume for some results that dim V = 3; this assumption is often necessary only because of the particular mode of proof we present,
and an exact statement of
the conditions required for our results will be found later in the chapter.
2.4.5.
Proposition.
All transvections belong to SL(V),
and if dim V = 3 they form a complete conjugacy class in SL(V). Proof.
Since all transvections are conjugate in GL(V)
they all have the same determinant of the result 2. 4. 3(ii) we find
} ¢ F*.
» = 1.
Taking the determinant
Suppose now that
and refer to the proof in 2. 4.4 that if 7 and
in V they are conjugate in GL(V). has
deth=
w#1,
we obtain an h ¢€ GL(V) that is,
h « SL(V).
7T' are transvections
If the h € GL(V)
change the element
b
dim V = 3
found there
of the first basis by
such that (h) ‘th=7'
and
Notice that since two elements
the basis are prescribed by the proof of 2.4.4,
deth= Ty (a and
it must,
anormal subgroup by 2.4.5,
N 3 (that is, it has no triangles) and each two nonadjacent points are joined by precisely Further,
the graph has
pe athe 4.6.1.
n vertices,
c paths of length
2.
where
Ree. c
Proposition.
(i)
If c ¢ {2, 4, 6}
then
B(k, 0, c) is feasible if and only if k is one of a finite list of values for each given
c.
(ii) B(k, 0, 2) is feasible if and only if k=t* +1 where t is aninteger
# 0 (mod 4).
(iii) B(k, 0, 4) is feasible if and only if k=t* where t is any integer.
(iv)
B(k, 0, 6) is feasible if and only if k=t? - 3 where
t is aninteger
Proof. if
+ 0 (mod 4),
Applying 4.5.2,
s= (c? - 4c + 4k)?
B(k, 0, c) is feasible if and only
is an integer and
102
me th
Si b|-
k|
is an integer.
s
dag led ea Cc
Eliminating
k from these two expressions and
writing the result as a polynomial equation in s we find
6 Thus,
ee
if c #2,
= Zoe Ac = 6) = 0,
4, 6 the integer
s
must be a divisor of
e*(c - 2)(c - 4)(c - 6) andfor each c the list of possibilities for s isfinite.
Since
result (i) for
k=
(s? - ce? + 4c)/4
k.
we have the corresponding
:
If c= 2, then s= 2(k- 1)”, sothat k=1+t’, and m=
(t? + 1)(t? + t+ 2)/4
which is integral only when
t #0 (mod 4).
If
4
c=4, then s= 2k”, sothat k—t* and
m=tit + 1)(t? + t+ 2)/8, which is always integral.
If c= 6, then
s = 2(k+ 3)”, so that k=
t7-°3* and
m = (t + 1)(t + 2)(t® - 3)/12 which is integral only when t 7 0 (mod 4),
//
The case
c= 1
of the preceding proposition is just the
result of 4.2.6 ina slightly weaker form, graph of valency have diameter
k and girth
5, with
For the case
divide 27 and so
3, 21 or 183.
that
k=
c=
either trivial or meaningless.) as may be seen by calculating
Here m,
B(k, 0, 1) if itis 3 we find that
s
must
lesser values of k are k=
183
is actually impossible
and the realizability of the
B(21, 0, 3) is undecided.
103
must
(It will be convenient to suppose
k = 3 throughout this discussion;
feasible matrix
1+ k? vertices,
2 and intersection matrix
distance-transitive.
for it is clear that a
Of course,
B(3, 0, 3)
is realized by oa 3°
3
Apart from the graphs
Ke ic which always realize
B(k, 0, k), the only known example of graphs with intersection matrix
B(k, 0, c) are the two graphs with
c=1
and
k= 3, 7
mentioned after 4. 2.6, and afew isolated examples with ce
{2, 4, 6}.
Before reviewing these examples we collect a
few simple facts about the structure of such graphs.
4.6.2.
Lemma.
with intersection matrix and let X = A (0),
Y=
Let
I be a distance-transitive graph
B(k, 0, c).
Each vertex in X
(ii)
Each two vertices in X
in
is joinedto
k-1
vertices in Y;
are joined to
c -
then
(i) is immediate.
For
(ii), notice that if
d(x, , x.) = 2 and so there are
I’ adjacent to both
x, and
X,.
Since
c vertices of
0 is one such vertex and
the rest must be in Y, we have (ii). If we label the vertices
Y
b=k(k-1)/c
blocks and
possible that two vertices in Y
/
by the vertices of X
they are joined then 4. 6. 2 says that design with
1 common
Y.
Proof.
X,, X, €X
0 of T
A, (0). Then:
(i)
vertices
Choose one vertex
(X, Y) isa r =k
to which
2-(k, c, c-1)
- 1, except that it is
have the same label, and so we do not necessarily have a design in the strict sense of definition 3.2.1. It is also worth noticing that two vertices in Y can be joined by an edge only if their labels are disjoint, for otherwise the graph
I would have triangles.
104
In the case
_c = 2 no two vertices in Y can have the same
label, for a configuration
can be rearranged as
p
—
=>
q
pq contradicting the fact that
c= 2.
In this case
(X, Y)
2-(k, 2, 1) design and must be the complete design, Lee Pe,€ ‘ .
Each vertex
pq € Y
is joinedto
that is
k - 2. other vertices
in Y, each of which is labelled by a pair disjoint from there are
oe =
such vertices to choose from.
4, 6.1 (ii) we see that the first feasible value for oN
ie ea
aa ps = and so
conditions.
I
isa
pq, and
Returning to k is
5, and here
is completely determined by these
It is not hard to check that this graph does satisfy all
the relevant conditions, next feasible case is k=
and so 10
B(5, 0, 2) is realizable.
The
and here too there is a graph,
has a group of automorphisms
isomorphic with
vertex stabilizer
See the appendix for references.
PSL(2,
9).
105
PSL(3,
which
4), and No
other realizations are known when c = 2, the next feasible matrix
2
being B(26, 0, 2).
and
not realizable,
The first three feasible
is realizable.
16
k=
k=, 94 is
7
4, 9, 16; k=4 is realized by
k are
values for
4.
c=
We pass on to the case
We sketch the justifica-
tion of the last two statements.
4.6.3.
Proposition.
Proof.
Suppose there is a graph with this intersection
matrix; 4.6.2.
choose one vertex For each
x € X
which are joined to x. we have
B(9, 0, 4) is not realizable.
0 and label the other vertices as in
let
(x) denote the set of vertices in Y
Then by 4. 6. 2, |(x) | = 8 andif
|(w) n (x) | = 3, so that
|(w) U (x) | = 13.
is the label of some vertex in Y;
it is joined to
vertices in Y, none of which contains But there are only 18 vertices in Y contain of u
w
and
or v
vertices in Y and
x;
in Y 8- 5=
also.
9- 4= 5 or
x
uvwx other
in its label.
and 13 of them
Now we have a contradiction,
containing
containing
v
and
3 vertices in Y
w
w
and
Proposition.
for there are 3
w, and 3 vertices containing
v
and so there are at most 5 vertices or
x.
Thus there are at least
containing
on which the Mathieu group
Proof.
altogether,
Suppose
x, so that these 13 must contain all the occurrences
one of these is uvwx
4.6.4.
u, v, w,
w#x
v
and neither
w
nor
x.
Vf
B(16, 0, 4) is realized by a graph M,,
acts as a group of automorphisms.
Recall that in 3. 6.4 we constructed a 3 - (22, 6, 1)
design with automorphism group
M, >> our graph will have the 77
blocks of this design as vertices,
two vertices being joined by an
106
edge whenever the corresponding blocks are disjoint.
To check
that this graph has the required. properties recall that the parameters of the design are, r, = 5 and
in the notation of chapter 3,
r, =2X=1.
0, 1, or 2 points,
J =a
Two distinct blocks could intersect in
but if they have one common point,
this point and the blocks not containing it gives a design which is the projective plane blocks (lines) intersect; they have two.
21,
PG(2,
then removing
2 - (21, 5, 1)
4) in which every two
thus if two blocks have one common point
The number of blocks meeting a given block in two
points is Ge (5 - 1) = 60, so that the number of blocks disjoint from a given block is correct valency.
77-1-60=
16.
Thus our graph has the
The remaining conditions can be checked by
using counting techniques and applying the known transitivity properties of
M,,
on the points and blocks of the design.
No other realizations of
B(k, 0, 4) are known.
We pass to the case
6.
c=
//
Here the only known graphs are
for@iv=t6 (Ky 4)? and k= 22, the graph due to D. G. Higman and C. C. Sims,
which we now construct.
k, = 77 and that the 'design' parameters familiar
First we notice that
k, 22
(X, Y) which follows from 4. 6. 2 has
2 - (22, 6, 5), which are the parameters of the now
3 - (22, 6, 1) design when considered as a 2-design.
This motivates following construction.
3 - (22, 6, 1) design and let V=
Let
(X, B) be our
{0} UXUB;
define the set E
of edges thus:
{0, x} €E
for all
{x, B} €E
eee
{f,, 8B,} €E
if 2, 6, €B
107
x eX, Pee
ean
x ih,
and pe
=
I= (V, E) is a distance-transitive graph realizing B(22, 0, 6). The proof requires us to show that I’ is vertex-
Then
transitive only, for then the fact that the stabilizer of the vertex M, Be which is transitive on
0 contains
and
B, implies
To prove vertex-transitivity we pick a
distance-transitivity.
x € X, show by counting that
vertex
X
3 - (22, 6, 1) design,
(A, (x), A, (x))
isa
and then use the known result that there is
a unique design with these parameters to construct an automorphism of
0 to x.
IT taking
The automorphism group of this graph contains a subgroup HS
(actually of index 2) such that
4.6.5.
Theorem.
Proof.
By 4.5.3
The group
HS
IT, and since the stabilizer that either
HS
solvable, N’ 4
N
N
2°.5*
andso
is simple we know from 1. 5. 7
and so by a famous
1.
HS.
Then
result of Burnside, subgroup
which would mean
Now we have a contradiction,
N
N’ #N.
is But
N=
N.
Thus in
for the subgroup
eN}
is normal in HS
must be
M,,
N’ = 1, since any nontrivial normal subgroup
is abelian.
{n? ln of N
acts primitively on the vertices of
and in particular its commutator
HS
is simple.
is a regular normal subgroup of
must be transitive by 1.5.6, fact
HS
is simple or it contains a regular normal subgroup.
Suppose IN| = 100=
(HS) | = M,,.
But
N
and so by the same argument as above,
contains elements
We conclude that
HS
of order
it
5.
has no regular normal subgroup and so
it must be simple.
Wi.
108
4.7
Conclusion
We conclude these lectures by remarking that the four problems introduced in 3.1 each has relevance in the study of distance-transitive graphs, of diameter
2.
in particular,
in the study of such graphs
The major part of the work presented here has been
concerned with the existence problem for which we have a partial theory;
the fact that the other problems have hardly been mentioned
reflects the current lack of knowledge about them. problem seems
The extension
especially worthy of study, for we have seen that
the new Higman-Sims
graph is an extension of a graph based on
M,.»
and several other new simple groups have been constructed in this way.
Inparticular,
Fischer has found three new simple groups by
successively extending a distance-transitive graph with intersection
matrix B(180, 51, 45) and automorphism group PSU(6, 2”). A list of the parameters groups now follows,
of graphs with new simple automorphism
together with a list of feasible parameters
for distance-transitive graphs of diameter 2 and 'small valency’.
109
Appendix
This is a list of triples
(k, a, c) which are realized by a
distance-transitive graph possessing a 'sporadic' simple group of automorphisms.
The word
'sporadic' is interpreted to meana
group which is not one of a known infinite family.
The names
of
the discoverers are given together with a page reference to the
Harvard Symposium (Brauer and Sah, 1969) where details may be found.
Fischer's groups are described in a set of duplicated notes
published by the Mathematical Institute of the University of Warwick.
k
a
22
0
6
36
14
416
Higman and Sims
p. 203
12
Hall and Janko
DT
100
96
Suzuki
p. 165
162
105
81
Maclaughlin
p. 109
693
180
126
3510
693
351
31671
LO
Fischer
3240
Additional information on sporadic groups is given in a paper by
J. Tits, Groupes finis simples sporadiques,
22 (1969-70),
375.
110
Seminaire Bourbaki,
This is a list of the triples which
B(k, a, c) is feasible,
(k, a, c) with
k=
16 for
with the exception of those parameters
which can be dealt with by standard constructions.
That is, we
exclude:
(i)
the case
(ii)
thetriples
(2t - 2,
t- 2, 2),
c=k,
dealt with in 4.5. 4;
(2t- 4, t- 2, 4), t
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Biases
LONDON MATHEMATICAL LECTURE NOTE SERIES Editor: PROFEssoR G, C. SHEPHARD,
SOCIETY
~
University of East Anglia
The purpose of the series is to publish records of lectures and seminars on advanced topics in mathematics held at universities throughout the world. For the most part, these are at postgraduate
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Finite Groups of Automorphisms NORMAN BIGGS In the study of finite groups it is often illuminating to consider structures of geometric or algebraic origin and their associated groups of automorphisms. These lecture notes deal with those
structures which have been found to give rise to groups of auto-
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