In group theory, the correspondence theorem (also the lattice theorem, and variously and ambiguously the third and fourth isomorphism theorem) states that if <math>N</math> is a normal subgroup of a group <math>G</math>, then there exists a bijection from the set of all subgroups <math>A</math> of <math>G</math> containing <math>N</math>, onto the set of all subgroups of the quotient group <math>G/N</math>. Loosely speaking, the structure of the subgroups of <math>G/N</math> is exactly the same as the structure of the subgroups of <math>G</math> containing <math>N</math>, with <math>N</math> collapsed to the identity element.

Specifically, if

: <math>G</math> is a group,

: <math>N \triangleleft G</math>, a normal subgroup of <math>G</math>,

: <math>\mathcal{G} = \{ A \mid N \subseteq A \leq G \}</math>, the set of all subgroups <math>A</math> of <math>G</math> that contain <math>N</math>, and

: <math>\mathcal{N} = \{ S \mid S \leq G/N \}</math>, the set of all subgroups of <math>G/N</math>,

then there is a bijective map <math>\phi: \mathcal{G} \to \mathcal{N}</math> such that

: <math>\phi(A) = A/N</math> for all <math>A \in \mathcal{G}.</math>

One further has that if <math>A</math> and <math>B</math> are in <math>\mathcal{G}</math> then

  • <math>A \subseteq B</math> if and only if <math>A/N \subseteq B/N</math>;
  • if <math>A \subseteq B</math> then <math>|B:A| = |B/N:A/N|</math>, where <math>|B:A|</math> is the index of <math>A</math> in <math>B</math> (the number of cosets <math>bA</math> of <math>A</math> in <math>B</math>);
  • <math>\langle A,B \rangle / N = \left\langle A/N, B/N \right\rangle,</math> where <math>\langle A, B \rangle</math> is the subgroup of <math>G</math> generated by <math>A\cup B;</math>
  • <math>(A \cap B)/N = A/N \cap B/N</math>, and
  • <math>A</math> is a normal subgroup of <math>G</math> if and only if <math>A/N</math> is a normal subgroup of <math>G/N</math>.

This list is far from exhaustive. In fact, most properties of subgroups are preserved in their images under the bijection onto subgroups of a quotient group.

More generally, there is a monotone Galois connection <math>(f^*, f_*)</math> between the lattice of subgroups of <math>G</math> (not necessarily containing <math>N</math>) and the lattice of subgroups of <math>G/N</math>: the lower adjoint of a subgroup <math>H</math> of <math>G</math> is given by <math>f^*(H) = HN/N</math> and the upper adjoint of a subgroup <math>K/N</math> of <math>G/N</math> is a given by <math>f_*(K/N) = K</math>. The associated closure operator on subgroups of <math>G</math> is <math>\bar H = HN</math>; the associated kernel operator on subgroups of <math>G/N</math> is the identity. A proof of the correspondence theorem can be found here.

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Similar results hold for rings, modules, vector spaces, and algebras. More generally an analogous result that concerns congruence relations instead of normal subgroups holds for any algebraic structure.

See also

  • Modular lattice

References