Journal of Algebra 249, 147 – 185 (2002) doi:10.1006/jabr.2001.9057, available online at http://www.idealibrary.com on
Dade’s Conjecture for the Simple O’Nan Group Katsuhiro Uno Department of Mathematics, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan E-mail:
[email protected]
and Satoshi Yoshiara Division of Mathematical Sciences, Osaka Kyoiku University, Kashiwara, Osaka 582-8582, Japan E-mail:
[email protected] Communicated by Michel Brou´e Received April 2, 2001
1. INTRODUCTION Let G be the simple O’Nan group. It has order 29 · 34 · 5 · 73 · 11 · 19 · 31, it has Schur multiplier of order 3, and AutG/G is cyclic of order 2. In this paper, we prove that Dade’s conjecture for G is true. Here we mean by saying the conjecture the inductive form of the conjecture (see [3]). According to [3], the inductive form is equivalent to the invariant projective form if the outer automorphism group has cyclic Sylow q-subgroups for each prime q. Thus, for the simple O’Nan group, it suffices to check the invariant projective form. Moreover, if a defect group of a block is cyclic, then the invariant projective form is proved to be true for this block in [4]. Thus, it suffices to treat the primes 2, 3, and 7. In this paper, A B and A · B denote a split and a nonsplit extension of A by B, respectively. We use n and Dn to denote a cyclic and a dihedral group of order n, respectively. Moreover, for a prime p, an elementary abelian group of order pn is denoted by pn . For an odd prime p, we denote by 1+2n 1+2n p+ an extraspecial group of order p1+2n and exponent p, and by 2− a minus-type extraspecial group of order 21+2n . Finally, Sn and An denote the symmetric group and the alternating group of degree n, respectively. 147 0021-8693/02 $35.00 2002 Elsevier Science (USA)
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After submitting our manuscript, we were informed that An and O’Brien had written a paper in which they proved the inductive form of the conjecture and the weight conjecture for both O’Nan and Rudivalis simple groups [1]. However, most of their calculations were carried out by computer, while ours are computer free, although some character tables stored in the GAP library are used. Hence we obtain subgroup structures of the O’Nan simple group explicitly in terms of elements and particular subgroups.
2. DADE’S CONJECTURES We describe the invariant projective form of the conjecture. Let G be a finite group and p a prime. A radical p-chain of G is a chain C P0 < P1 < P2 < · · · < Pn of p-subgroups Pi of G such that (i) (ii)
P0 = Op G and
Pi = Op ∩ij=0 NG Pj for all i = 0 1 n.
For those C, we denote by NG C the normalizer ∩ni=0 NG Pi of C in G, and by C, the length n of C. Let p G be the set of all radical p-chains of G. The group G acts on p G by conjugation. We denote a set of representatives of G-conjugacy classes of p G by p G/G. If a p-subgroup P of G satisfies P = Op NG P, then we say that P is a radical p-subgroup of G. The set of radical p-subgroups of G is denoted by p G. Thus, C P0 < P1 < P2 < · · · < Pn is a radical chain if and only if P0 = Op G and Pi+1 /Pi lies in p ∩ij=0 NG Pj /Pi for all i = 0 1 n − 1. be a Let Z be a cyclic subgroup of the Schur multiplier of G and let G central extension of G by Z. Thus, we have a short exact sequence → G → 1 1→Z→G as a normal subgroup. Then E acts Let E be a finite group containing G on p G. For each C in p G, we have E G
and
NGC NE C
In this situation, for each C in G, an inteLet B be a p-block of G. p ≤ F ≤ E, and a faithful irreducible ger d, a subgroup F of E with G character ζ of Z, we denote by k NGC B d F ζ
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the number of irreducible characters ϕ of NGC such that
(A) ϕ belongs to a block b of NGC with bG = B, (B) the p-part of NGC/ϕ1 is pd ,
= F, and (C) the inertia subgroup T of ϕ in NE C satisfies GT (D) ϕ lies on ζ. The invariant projective form of Dade’s conjecture is stated as follows. Conjecture 2.1. Let p be a prime and let G be a finite group with Op G = 1. Consider the above situation. If the order pdB of a defect group of B is greater than the p-part of Z, then −1C k NGC B d F ζ = 0 G C∈p G/
for all d and F. We say that the conjecture holds for G if it holds for G and any choices of Z, ζ, E, and B. = G and the condition (D) means nothIn the case where Z is trivial, G ing, and thus we use kNG C B d F to mean kNGC B d F ζ for = E, we may consider notational convenience. Moreover, in the case of G only the conditions (A), (B), and (D), and we use kNGC B d ζ to mean kNGC B d F ζ. Combining those, we also use kNG C B d = E. if Z is trivial and G = G Now we simplify the situation under certain circumstances. Similar simplification is used in the case of J3 . See [9]. Suppose for a moment that the is either G Schur multiplier of G is a cyclic group of prime order. Then G itself or the covering group of G. Let us consider first the case where Z is = G. Suppose further that ZG is trivial. Then G is identified trivial and G with InnG and thus can be regarded as a subgroup of AutG. Hence, it suffices to treat the case of E = AutG. Moreover, if OutG is a cyclic group of prime order, then F must be G or AutG. We have the following. Lemma 2.2. Suppose that Z and ZG are trivial and that OutG is a = G and if we show the equation in the cyclic group of prime order. Then G conjecture only in two cases (i) E = G = F and (ii) E = AutG = F, for any B d, then Conjecture 2.1 holds in the case where Z is trivial. Proof. By the argument preceding the lemma, it suffices to treat the case of E = AutG and to show −1C k NG C B d G = 0 C∈p G/G
−1C k NG C B d AutG = 0
C∈p G/G
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for any B and d. However, kNG C B d G + kNG C B d AutG is the number of those ϕ with the properties (A) and (B). In other words, it is kNG C B d considered in the case of E = G = F. Hence, the two cases in the statement imply the above two equations. is a cyclic Returning to the general situation, we suppose that OutG since, group of prime order. In this case, F must be either E or GCE G, for any C ∈ p G and an irreducible character ϕ of NGC, the inertia subgroup T of ϕ in NE C satisfies G = Ker π ≤ GT ≤ GN C ≤ E GC E E Suppose further where π is the natural homomorphism from E to OutG. that the centralizer of Z in AutG is InnG. Then the inertia subgroup of is InnG, and hence, for any C ∈ G and an irreducible ζ in AutG p character ϕ of NGC lying over ζ, the inertia subgroup T of ϕ in NE C G = GT . Thus, the following holds. satisfies GC E is a cyclic group of prime order and Lemma 2.3. Suppose that OutG Then it suffices to treat the case that the centralizer of Z in AutG is InnG. of E = F = G. Proof.
then we have G, If E = GC E −1C k NGC B d E ζ = 0 G C∈p G/
G anyway. for any B and d. Hence, it suffices to treat the case of F = GC E But, in this case, the condition (C), GCE G = GT = F always holds by the assumption on the centralizer. Thus, it suffices to assume that E = F = G. Now we consider cancellations of radical chains, which were first noted by Sawabe (see Lemma 2.2 of [12]). Lemma 2.4. Let G be a finite group and fix a radical p-subgroup P of G with P = Op G. Suppose that the normalizer in G of a radical subgroup P = P is contained in NG P. Put of NG P with P < · · · < Pn ∈ p G C ≥ 2 1 = C Op G < P < P < · · · < Pn ∈ p G C ≥ 1 2 = C Op G < P < · · · in Then there is a bijection f 1 → 2 sending any Op G < P < P < · · ·. Moreover, for any C in 1 , we have NG C = 1 into Op G < P NG f C and C = f C + 1.
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The next result considers a group p2 SL2 p, where SL2 p acts on p2 naturally. In general, subgroups of pn GLn p appear quite often as normalizers of radical p-chains. Though the following result may be true for a general n with n = 1, we prove it only for n = 2, since only this case is necessary for our paper. Proposition 2.5. Let G be a subgroup of p2 GL2 p containing p2 SL2 p. Let H be the normalizer of a Sylow p-subgroup of G. Then G and H have only the principal p-blocks B0 and b0 , respectively. Moreover, we have bG 0 = B0 and kG B0 d = kH B0 d for every integer d. Proof. We use the argument in Section 6 of [10]. Let N = Op G. Then N∼ = p2 and we have N H. The first statement follows from V.3.11 of [5]. Let m = G/p2 SL2 p and let U be the subgroup of the unit group of and GFp with order m. Write G/N = G
a 0 H/N = H = a c d ∈ GFp ad ∈ U c d and regard N as a two-dimensional vector space over GFp. Let e1 and and e2 be standard unit vectors in N. Consider the conjugate actions of G H on N, which are realized as matrix multiplication. (Matrices act on N sends e1 to ae1 + from the left. So, for example, the above matrix in H acts transitively on the set of nontrivial ce2 and e2 to de2 .) The group G has three orbits, one consisting of the zero vector, elements in N, while H one consisting of nonzero scalar multiples of e2 , and one consisting of the and H are others. Then the stabilizers of e1 in G
1 b b ∈ GFp d ∈ U H1 = 0 d and
H2 =
1 0
0 d
d ∈ U
is respectively. Also, the stabilizer of e2 in H
a 0 c ∈ GFp a ∈ U H3 = c 1
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For a finite group K and an integer d, let kK d denote the number of irreducible characters ϕ of K such that the p-part of K/ϕ1 is pd . Then we have mp + 3 if d = 1 and p − 1/m is even, mp if d = 1 and p − 1/m is odd, kG d = if d = 0, m 0 otherwise, mp + 3 if d = 1 and p − 1/m is even, d = mp kH if d = 1 and p − 1/m is odd, 0 otherwise, m + p − 1/m if d = 1, kH1 d = kH3 d = 0 otherwise, m if d = 0, kH2 d = 0 otherwise. and H on IrrN (See also [13].) Then, considering the dual actions of G (see Section 4 of [10]), it follows from Clifford theory that d − 2 + kH d − 2 kG B0 d = kG 1 d − 2 + kH2 d − 2 + kH3 d − 2 kH B0 d = kH since a character of N can be extended to the stabilizer in relevant subgroups of G (see 5.20 of [8]). Therefore, the result holds. 3. CONJUGACY CLASSES OF SOME LOCAL SUBGROUPS OF THE O’NAN SIMPLE GROUP In the rest of this paper, we denote by G the simple O’Nan group, and by and A its covering group of order 3G and AutG, respectively. Note G that we can identify A with AutG. Thus, we may regard G as a subgroup of A. In this section, we determine the actions of a certain involution r of A outside G on the normalizers of some radical chains of G. Furthermore, are described. the conjugacy classes of those normalizers in G, A, and G 3.1. Review of Some Local Subgroups of G 3.1.1. Some 2-Locals To denote elements of G, we follow the notation in [11]. In particular, V denotes an abelian group 4 × 4 × 4 with generators vi of order 4 (i = 1 2 3), and s and t denote the 2-elements normalizing V with s4 = v1 v3
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and st = s−1 , t 2 = 1. The actions of s and t on V are given by v1s = v2 , v2s = v3 , v3s = v1 v2−1 v3 and v1t = v3−1 , v2t = v2−1 , v3t = v1−1 . Following [11, Lemma 5.2], we also set l = v1 v2−1
m = s2 v32
x = l2 m2 = v1 v22 v3−1
In the rest of this paper, the letters vi (i = 1 2 3), s, t, l, m, x, and V are used to denote those explicit elements and a subgroup of G, unless otherwise stated. 3.1.2. The Normalizer of a 32 -Subgroup From [11, Sect. 5], there is a 3-subgroup R ∼ = 32 of G whose normalizer has the following structure: NG R = Rlm4 × Kmst, K = NG R∞ ∼ = A6 ; 4 ∼ 2 4 ∼ CG K = Rlm = 3 4 with lm = 4 acting fixed point freely on R; CG a = R × K for every a ∈ R# , x st ∼ = D8 is a Sylow 2-subgroup of K; T = lm4 × x stmst is a Sylow 2-subgroup of NG R, where mst is an element of order 4 with square mst2 = l2 m4 = lm4 2 x2 which inverts all elements of lm4 × x ∼ = 4 × 4. Moreover, stmst = x−1 st. Every claim above is proved in [11, Sect. 5], except one about a generator of a Sylow 2-subgroup CT K of CG K ∼ = 32 4. In [11, Lemma 5.8], there −1 4 are two possibilities: v1 v2 or lm . The former case does not occur because v1 v2−1 = stv1 2 is a square element so that it is a 4B-element by [11, Lemma 4.3], whose centralizer is a 2-group. We use the letters R, K to denote those explicit subgroups of G, and a to denote a fixed nontrivial element of R, unless otherwise stated. 3.1.3. Sylow 3-Normalizers Let U be a Sylow 3-subgroup of G. Then U ∼ = 34 , and NG U is isomorphic to a subgroup of the semidirect product GF34 Sp4 3 of the natural module GF34 with the symplectic group Sp4 3. A complement F in 1+4 with F/L ∼ NG U to U has a normal subgroup L isomorphic to 2− = D10 [11, Sect. 5]. 1+4 (see the There is a single class of subgroups of Sp4 3 isomorphic to 2− 1+4 exposition previous to [11, Lemma 5.14]), with normalizer 2− · A5 . Thus, up to conjugacy, the group F is uniquely realized as a subgroup of this normalizer. For explicitness, we choose the following presentation of F. We identify U and Sp4 3, respectively, with the row vector space GF34 and the group of linear transformations on GF34 preserving the
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symplectic form f determined by f ei ej = δ5 i+j (1 ≤ i j ≤ 4), where ei i = 1 4 denotes the natural basis of GF34 . Then we can verify that the linear transformations ij (j = 1 5) below are involutions of Sp4 3 which generate a central product L of i1 i2 i1 i5 ∼ = Q8 and i3 i4 ∼ = D8 with the amalgamated center −I, where −I ei → −ei (i = 1 4). i1 e1 → e3 e2 → −e4 e3 → e1 e4 → −e2 i2 e1 → e2 + e3 e2 → −e1 − e4 e3 → −e1 + e4 e4 → e2 − e3 i3 e1 → e1 e2 → −e2 e3 → −e3 e4 → e4 i4 e1 → −e2 + e3 e2 → e1 − e4 e3 → −e1 − e4 e4 → e2 + e3 i5 e1 → −e2 e2 → −e1 e3 → −e4 e4 → −e3 In the normalizer of L in Sp4 3, we choose the following transformations b and n of order 5 and 4, respectively. We have n2 = −I and bn = b−1 . b e1 → −e2 − e3 − e4 e2 → e1 − e2 − e4 e3 → −e1 − e2 + e3 e4 → −e1 + e3 − e4 n e1 → e1 − e4 e2 → −e2 − e3 e3 → −e2 + e3 e4 → −e1 − e4 Then F = Lb n is a subgroup of Sp4 3 isomorphic to a complement F to U in NG U. Thus, we may identify NG U with the semidirect product of the natural module U = GF34 with F (≤ Sp4 3). The actions of b and n on L are determined from their actions on i1 i5 (the half of 1+4 10 involutions of L ∼ ) given below. = 2− b i1 i2 i3 i4 i5
n i1 i5 i2 i4
3.2. An Outer Involution r Lemma 3.1. There exist an involution r ∈ A\G, a Sylow 7-subgroup D of G, and a Sylow 3-subgroup R⊥ of K which satisfy the following conditions: ∼ L 2, but (1) r inverts all elements of V and centralizes NG V /V = 3 no element of NG V \V is centralized or inverted by r. (2) r normalizes R and K with CR r = a and Kr ∼ = PGL2 9. (3) mr = l−1 m3 , str = xst, sr = sv2 v1 v3−1 ε for some ε = ±1, where sr is conjugate to sv1 under the action of V . (4) mr is an element of order 8 in A\G normalizing R and R⊥ with square mr2 = lm4 −1 . For U = R × R⊥ , NA R ∩ NA U = NG R ∩ NG U mr and
NG R ∩ NG U = NG R ∩ NG R⊥ = Rlm4 × R⊥ x mst
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1+2 (5) D = c1 c2 ∼ = 7+ for some elements c1 , c2 of order 7, and NG D = Da x st. Moreover, c = c1 c2 is a generator of the center of D, and
c a = c 2 c1a = c14 c2a = c24 c x = c c1x = c2 c2x = c1−1 c st = c −1 c1st = c2 c2st = c1 ar = a xr = x−1 str = xst c r = c −1 c1r = c1 c2 c 3 i c2r = c1 c2−1 c −3 i for some i = ±2 Proof. By the argument in the proof of [11, Lemma 11.4], there is an involution r of A\G normalizing CG x2 such that it induces an inversetranspose automorphism on CG x/x ∼ = L3 4. Then r inverts a Sylow 7-subgroup c of the centralizer L3 2 by a field automorphism of L3 4 commuting with r. As c commutes with the element x of order 4, it lies in 1+2 the G-class 7A, and so D = O7 CG c ∼ = 7+ is a Sylow 7-subgroup of G. Since NG D is a split extension of D by 3 × D8 [11, Lemma 6.3] and the elements of order 3 form a single G-class, we may assume that NG D = Da x st on which an involution r of A\G acts, replacing c, D, and r by some conjugates. We may also assume that r normalizes a x st, as it is a Sylow 2-normalizer in NG D. Then x st r is a 2-subgroup of order 16 of GL2 7 ∼ = OutD. Since a Sylow 2-subgroup of GL2 7 is D32 and x st r contains an involution r outside D8 ∼ = x st, we have x st r ∼ = D16 . In r −1 particular, x = x and we may take str = xst, replacing r by r st if necessary. As a induces a scalar transformation on D/ZD, r centralizes a modulo ZD, and hence a r = 1. Then r acts on R = O3 CG a and K = CG a∞ . We also have CR r = a, as a Sylow 3-subgroup of CG r ∼ = J1 [11, Lemma 11.4] is of order 3. As Kr\K contains an involution r and an element str of order 8 (with square ststr = x−1 ), it is isomorphic to Kr ∼ = PGL2 9. The involution r normalizes CG K = Rlm4 and so a Sylow 2-subgroup of CG K. Replacing r by r g (and D by Dg ) for some g ∈ R, we may assume that r normalizes lm4 ∈ Syl2 CG K. (Note that the action of r g on K coincides with that of r, because g K = 1.) Then r normalizes CG lm4 x. It is immediate to see that the last centralizer coincides with V , because the image of lm4 in the factor group CG x/x ∼ = L3 4 [11, Lemma 4.15] is of order 4, and hence its centralizer in L3 4 is of order 24 = V /4 (see, e.g., [2, p. 24]). Thus, r normalizes V , and claim (1) follows by applying the arguments in the proof of [11, Lemma 11.3]. Claims (1) and (2) are established. We will show claim (3). We already have the equation str = xst. In the next few paragraphs, we determine the action of r on m. As r centralizes NG V /V and m = s2 v32 ∈ NG V , we have mr = mv for some v ∈ V . Since r normalizes R and lm4 x, it also normalizes NG R ∩ NG lm4 x,
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which is lm4 x stm = l m st = T . Thus, v = m−1 mr ∈ V ∩ T = lm4 × x, and hence v = lm4 i xj for some i j = 0 3. As m2 ∈ V is inverted by r, we have m−2 = m2 r = mv2 = m2 vm v. The last expression is equal to m2 x2j = m2+4j , as m inverts lm4 but centralizes x = l2 m2 . Thus, m−2 = m2+4j , and so j = 1 or 3. Suppose j = 1. Then mr = mlm4 i x ≡ mx ≡ m3 modulo lm4 . Passing to the factor group NA R/CG K ∼ = AutA6 , this implies that the conjugacy class 8C (with the notation in [2, p. 6]) of M10 ∼ = NG K/CG K represented by m ¯ as well as m ¯ 3 is invariant under the conjugation by an involution r¯ outside M10 . However, it is straightforward to see that two classes 8C and 8D∗∗ of M10 outside A6 are fused under AutA6 . This contradiction shows that j = 3. Then mr = mlm4 i x−1 for some i = 0 3. If i = 2 or 0, then mr = m−1 or mrl = mx−1 l = m−1 , respectively. In any case, m ∈ NG V \V is inverted by an outer involution r or rl (note that lr = l−1 , as l ∈ V ). However, the outer involutions r and rl normalize NG V , and so they never invert an element of NG V outside V by claim (1). This contradiction shows that i = 1 or 3, and mr = mlm4 ±1 x−1 . As m inverts lm4 but centralizes x, replacing r by r m (and D by Dm ) if necessary, we may assume that mr = mlm4 −1 l2 m−2 = l−1 m3 . (Note that st · r m = x−1 strm = str5m is of order 8 with square x−1 , and hence r m and r satisfy the same relations with st.) As m = s2 v32 and r inverts V , we have s2 r = s2 v2−1 v3−1 from the relation j mr = l−1 m3 . Since r centralizes NG V /V , we may write sr = sv1i v2 v3k for j j some i j k ∈ 0 1 2 3. Then s2 v2−1 v3−1 = sr 2 = s2 v1i v2 v3k s v1i v2 v3k = i+j−k j+2k s2 v1i+k v2 v3 . Thus, we have k ≡ −i, j ≡ −1 + 2i modulo 4, and sr = −1 2 −1 i sv1 v1 v2 v3 for some i ∈ 0 1 2 3. As st inverts s, the element s · str = sr str = stv1 v22 v3−1 sv1−1 v1 v22 v3−1 i = s2 tv22 v3 v1 v22 v3−1 i is an involution. Then we can check that i = 1 or 3, and hence sr = sv1−1 v1 v22 v3−1 ±1 . Then it follows from [11, Lemma 2.9(ii)] that sr is conjugate to sv1 under the action of V . Claim (3) is proved. Now let R⊥ be a Sylow 3-subgroup of Kr ∼ = PGL2 9 normalized by an element str of order 8, and set U = R × R⊥ . Then U ∼ = 34 is a Sylow 3-subgroup of G. We will show that NG R ∩ NG R⊥ = NG R ∩ NG U. Clearly, the left subgroup is contained in the right subgroup. To show the converse, observe that there are just 10 Sylow 3-subgroups of G containing R, since such subgroups correspond to the 10 Sylow 3-subgroups of CG R/R = K ∼ = A6 . Moreover, NG U is transitive on the 10 conjugates of R contained in U, −1 −1 because Rg < U implies that R < U g ≤ R × K, and so U g = U k for some k ∈ G, and thus U g = U kg with kg ∈ NG U. In particular, NG U ∩ NG R is of index 10 in NG U, which establishes the above equality.
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We will now determine NG R ∩ NG R⊥ . This subgroup has order NG R/10 = 25 34 and contains Rlm4 × R⊥ l2 m2 with index 2, as NKr R⊥ = R⊥ str by our choice of R⊥ (note that rst2 = x−1 ). Let T0 be a Sylow 2-subgroup of NG R ∩ NG R⊥ containing lm4 x. Then T0 lm4 x = 2 and hence T0 ≤ NG lm4 x ∩ NG R = T . Thus, T0 is a subgroup of T of index 2 normalizing both R and R⊥ . Then it follows from [11, Lemma 5.8(1)] that T0 = lm4 x mst and NG R ∩ NG R⊥ = Ulm4 x mst. Since NA R ∩ NA R⊥ NG R ∩ NG R⊥ ≤ 2 and str normalizes R and R⊥ , we have NA R ∩ NA R⊥ = NG R ∩ NG R⊥ str = R lm4 × R⊥ l2 m2 mststr = R lm4 × R⊥ l2 m2 mstmr. Thus, claim (4) is verified. 1+2 It remains to check claim (5). We may choose elements c1 , c2 of D ∼ = 7+ satisfying the relations in the claim with a, x, and st. The actions of r on a, x, and st are already obtained. As r induces an inverse-transpose automorphism on CG x/x ∼ = L3 4 (see the proof of [11, Lemma 11.4]), r does not centralize an element c of CG x of order 7. As r normalizes ZD = c, we have c r = c −1 . Finally, as r exchanges xst and st, it also exchanges CD xst = c1 and CD st = c1 c2 c 3 . Thus, c1r = c1 c2 c 3 i for some i = ±1 ±2 ±3. Using str = rxst, then we have c2r = c1str = c1r xst = c1 c2 c 3 xst i = c1 c2−1 c −3 i . To restrict i, we note c1 c2 = c and c −1 = c r = c1r c2r . Putting the above expressions for c1r and c2r in the last 2 2 commutator, we have c −1 = c1i c2i c1i c2−i = c −i −i , as c1 c2 c 3 i is c1i c2i modulo ZD, etc. Thus, we have 1 ≡ 2i2 (mod 7), whence i = ±2. In the following, we use the letters r, R⊥ , U, and D to denote the involution of A\G, the Sylow 3-subgroups of K and G, and the Sylow 7-subgroup of G in Lemma 3.1, respectively. Following the notation in Section 3.1.3, 1+4 of a we also use the letters F and L to denote subgroups D10 and 2− complement to U in NG U, identified with explicit subgroups of Sp4 3. and NG P-Classes 3.3. Correspondence between NGPBefore giving explicit representatives for the conjugacy classes of some we give some remarks. local subgroups of G as well as G, to the largest norThe map sending a p-subgroup P of G = G/Z G gives a bijection of the of its full inverse image in G mal p-subgroup P containing O G. Then this p-subgroups of G with the p-subgroups of G p map induces a bijection between p G and p G, and hence between p G and p G. consists of three elements The inverse image of an element g ∈ G in G 2 and gˆ is an element of G ˆ where z is a generator of ZG g, ˆ z g, ˆ and z g, = g. These three elements are conjugate under G if and only with gZ ˆ G
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of C g. If g is a if they are under some element in the inverse image C G ! ! 3 -element, we may take gˆ as a 3 -element as well. In particular, gˆ is never conjugate to z g. ˆ Assume to the contrary that g has order multiple of 3. is a 3-group, there is a Sylow p-subgroup of C that centralizes As ZG is an extraspecial group 31+4 gˆ unless p = 3. As a Sylow 3-subgroup of G + a Sylow 3-subgroup of C centralizes gˆ exactly when its with center ZG, image in CG g is an isotropic subspace of a Sylow 3-subgroup U ∼ = 34 with respect to a symplectic form invariant under NG U. If a Sylow 3-subgroup of CG g is a nonisotropic subspace, then three elements g, ˆ z g, ˆ and z 2 gˆ form a single conjugacy class under C. containing of G In particular, the conjugacy classes of a subgroup H can be read from those of the image H = H/Z as follows: The ZG G of the H-class of an element g consists either of a inverse image in G single H-class of length three times or of three classes of lengths with representatives g, ˆ z g, ˆ and z 2 g. ˆ The former holds exactly when g has the order multiple of 3 and a Sylow 3-subgroup of CG g is conjugate to a nonisotropic subspace of U with respect to a symplectic form preserved by NG U. 3.4. Conjugacy Classes of Some Local Subgroups We will now give explicit representatives for the conjugacy classes of CG j ∼ = 4 · L3 4 2, where j = x2 = m4 = v12 v32 ; N V ∼ = 43 · L 2; G
3
NG V p ∼ = 43 · S4 , where V p = V s2 t; NG R ∼ = 32 4 × A6 2; and 1+2 NG D ∼ = 7+ 3 × D8 , where D is a Sylow 7-subgroup of G in Lemma 3.1; (see the previous paragraph). It folas well as their correspondences in G lows from Lemma 3.1(1), (2), and (5) that these groups are normalized by the involution r ∈ A\G in Lemma 3.1. (Note that V p /V is a subgroup of NG V /V , which is centralized by r.) We will also give representatives for the classes of the following groups as well as their correspondents in G: 1+4 NG U ∼ D10 , where U is a Sylow 3-subgroup of G in = 34 2− Lemma 3.1; and N R ∩ N U ∼ = 34 4 × 4 2. G
G
Note that the element mr ∈ A\G of order 8 in Lemma 3.1 normalizes those groups by Lemma 3.1(4).
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The group NG R ∩ NG U = NG R ∩ NG R⊥ has two presentations: one is in terms of symplectic linear transformations in Section 3.1.3 as a subgroup of NG U and the other is in terms of abstract generators of NG R in Section 3.1.2. To combine them, we examine the former presentation furthermore. Setting u1 = i2 i5 n and u2 = i1 i2 n, we have u21 = −i3 and CU u1 = e2 e3 and u22 = i3 and CU u2 = e1 e4 . Moreover, i1 i2 inverts all elements of u1 u2 ∼ = 4 × 4. Thus, R and R⊥ , respectively, correspond to the nonisotropic subspaces e1 e4 and e2 e3 . Moreover, we may assume that u1 (resp. u2 ) or its inverse corresponds to lm4 (resp. x). Furthermore, NG R ∩ NG R⊥ = NG U ∩ NG R corresponds to the semidirect product U u1 u2 i1 i2 . Among the above seven local subgroups, all except NG V p , NG R ∩ NG U, and NG D are maximal subgroups of G. The character tables of has already been calculated and is contained in their correspondents in G the library of GAP. For the three exceptions, it is straightforward to calculate the classes and to find irreducible characters, based on the descriptions of those groups given in Section 3.1 and Lemma 3.1(4) and (5). Here we only give an explicit representative for each class of those local subgroups of G, in order to determine the action of the elements r or mr on the classes of those local subgroups. In Tables 1 and 4, b denotes an element of order 5 of K. Also, c denotes the element of order 7 in Lemma 3.1(5). We saw above that a Sylow 3-subgroup R of CG j is a nonisotropic subspace of U. Thus, it follows TABLE 1 Conjugacy Classes of CG j Name 1A 4A 2A 2B 4B 3A 12A 6A 4C 4D 4E 8A 8B 5A 20A 10A
Rep. g
Cg
Powers
1 x = l 2 m2 j = x2 = m4
29 32 57 28 32 57 29 32 57
2A
2 2 2 3
vv s 4 = v 1 v3 a ax aj l = v1 v2−1 v 1 v2 lm4 = v1−1 v2−1 v32 s2 2 s v 1 v2 b xb jb
8
2 28 2 3 32 2 2 32 2 2 32 27 26 27 25 25 22 5 22 5 22 5
2A 3A × 4A 3A × 2A 2B 2B 2B 4B 4B 5A × 4A 5A × 2A
Name
Rep. g
Cg
Powers
20B 7A 28A
x−1 b c xc
5A × 4A
14A 28B
jc x−1 c
22 5 22 7 22 7 22 7
7A × 4A 7A × 2A
22 7
7A × 4A
2C 4F 6B 6C 8C 8D 16A 16B 16C 16D
st stv12 ast axst stv1 stv3 s sv1 v3 = s5 sv1 sv3−1 = sv1 5
2 4 32 24 2 2 32 2 2 32 24 24 24 24 24 24
2B 3A × 2C 3A × 2C 4C 4C 8A 8A 8B 8B
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of a C jfrom the last remark in Section 3.3 that the inverse image in G G ˆ exactly when C is one of five class C forms a single class under CGj classes of elements of order multiple of 3: 3A 6A 6C 12A. In par have 31 and 331 − 5 + 5 = 83 ticular, CG j and its inverse image in G classes, respectively. In Table 2, τ denotes an element of order 3 of NG V centralizing x. The letter c ! denotes an element of order 7 in NG V (which is a 7B-element of G, while the element c lies in the G-class 7A). As a Sylow 3-subgroup of NG V is of order 3, which is always isotropic, a Sylow 3-subgroup of the splits over ZG. By a theorem of Gasch¨ corresponding normalizer in G uts, the corresponding normalizer to NG V in G splits over ZG, and hence it is isomorphic to 3 × NG V . Since the 4A-elements in V p = V s2 t ∼ = 43 · 22 generate V , we have p p NG V ≤ NG V , and hence NG V = V s tτ ∼ = 43 S4 , where τ is an element of order 3 cyclically permuting three cosets s2 V , tV , and s2 tV . Then τ acts on the subgroup of V centralizing every elements in those cosets, which is CV s2 t = x. Thus, τ centralizes x, and it is the same as the representative appeared (denoted τ as well) in Table 2. It is straightforward to calculate the conjugacy classes of NG V p . The results are summarized in Table 3, where τ denotes the same element as in Table 2, and the last two columns show the fusion in NG V and CG j (with the class names in Tables 2 and 1). Since the inverse image of NG V in G p splits over ZG, that of NG V does as well. In Table 4, a! is a nontrivial element of R⊥ , and a = a1 and a2 (resp. ! a1 and a!2 ) are representatives of two lm4 -orbits in R# (resp. x-orbits in R⊥ # ). For each representative g of a class, the last column denotes the name of the conjugacy class of NG R/CG K ∼ = M10 which contains the coset CG Kg (following [2, p. 5]). In particular, the 24 classes other than the last six correspond to the classes of Rlm4 × K ∼ = 32 4 × TABLE 2 Conjugacy Classes of NG V Name
Rep. g
Cg
Powers
1A 2A 4A 4B
1 j x s 4 = v 1 v3
29 37 29 3 28 3 28
2A 2A
2B 4B 8A 8B
st ∼ s2 v1−1 stv12 ∼ s2 v1 stv1 ∼ s2 stv3 ∼ s2 v1 v2
25 25 25 25
2A 4B 4B
16A
s
24
8A
Name
Rep. g
Cg
Powers
16B 16C 16D
sv1 sv1 v3 = s5 sv3−1
24 24 24
8B 8A 8B
7A 7B 3A 6A 12A 12B
c! c ! −1 τ τj τx τx−1
7 7 22 3 22 3 22 3 22 3
3A × 2A 3A × 4A 3A × 4A
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TABLE 3 Conjugacy Classes of NG V p Name
Rep. g
Cg
NG V
CG j
1A 2A 4A
1 j x
29 3 29 3 28 3
1A 2A 4A
1A 2A 4A
2B 4B 4C 4D 4E
v22 v32 s = v 1 v3 l = v1 v2−1 v1−1 v2−1 v32 v1 v2
28 28 27 27 26
2A 4B 4B 4A 4B
2C 4F 8A 8B
s2 v1−1 s 2 v1 s2 2 s v1 v2
25 25 25 25
2B 4C 8A 8B
4
Name
Rep. g
Cg
NG V
CG j
2B 4B 4C 4E 4D
2D 4G 8C 8D
st stv12 stv1 stv3
24 24 24 24
2B 4C 8A 8B
2C 4F 8C 8D
16A 16B 16C 16D
s sv1 s5 sv1 5
24 24 24 24
16A 16B 16C 16D
16A 16B 16C 16D
2B 4B 8A 8B
3A 6A 12A 12B
τ τj τx τx−1
22 3 22 3 22 3 22 3
3A 6A 12A 12B
3A 6A 12A 12A
A6 under the action of NG R. From the last remark in Section 3.3, the of an N R-class C forms a single class under N R inverse image in G G G exactly when C is one of 11 classes of elements of order multiple of 3: 3A 3D 6A 6B 12A 12C 15A, and 15B. (Observe that each centralizer contains nonisotropic subspaces R or R⊥ .) Thus, the inverse image has 330 − 11 + 11 = 68 classes. of NG R in G NGR In Tables 5 and 6, we use the same notation as in Section 3.1.3 and the exposition above. Note that we use the letter b to denote the symplectic transformation in Section 3.1.3, but not an element of order 5 in K as in Tables 1 and 4, though they are conjugate under G. From the last remark of an N U-class C forms a single in Section 3.3, the inverse image in G G class under NGU exactly when it is one of four classes of elements of has 318 − 4 + 4 = order multiple of 3: 3A 6A 12A 12B. Thus, NGU 46 classes. In Table 6, for each class of NG R ∩ NG U, the first (resp. second) column provides a representative using its description Rlm4 × R⊥ xmst as a subgroup of NG R (resp. e1 e4 u1 × e2 e3 u2 i1 i2 as a subgroup of NG U). In the first column, we also use the same letters as in Table 4 to denote some elements of R and R⊥ . From the last remark in of an N R ∩ N U-class C forms a Section 3.3, the inverse image in G G G ∩ N U exactly when it is one of 10 classes of single class under NGR G elements of order multiple of 3 3A 3D 6A 6B 12A 12D. Thus, ∩ N U has 324 − 10 + 10 = 52 classes. NGR G Finally, we give the classes of NG D in Table 7. We use the notation in Lemma 3.1(5). We also set e = st for short. As a Sylow 3-subgroup of
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uno and yoshiara TABLE 4 Conjugacy Classes of NG R
Rep. g
Name
Centralizer Cg ∩ NG R
CNG R g
1 l2 lm4 a
Length
M10
1A 2A 4A 3A
lm4 × Kmst lm4 × K R×K
2 6 34 5 2 6 32 5 2 5 32 5 2 3 34 5
1 9 18 8
1A 1A 1A 1A
m4 l 2 m4 l am4
2B 2C 4C 6A
Rlm4 × l2 m2 stmst lm4 × l2 m2 stmst lm4 × l2 m2 st R × l2 m2 st
2 6 32 26 25 2 3 32
45 405 810 360
2A 2A 2A 2A
l 2 m2 m2 lm−2 al2 m2
4B 4D 4E 12A
Rlm4 × l2 m2 m lm4 × l2 m2 m lm4 × l2 m2 R × l2 m2
2 5 32 25 24 2 2 32
90 810 1620 720
4A 4A 4A 4A
a! a1 a! a2 a! l 2 a! lm4 a! l−1 m4 a!
3B 3C 3D 6B 12B 12C
Rlm4 × R! R × R! R × R! lm4 × R! lm4 × R! lm4 × R!
2 2 34 34 34 2 2 32 2 2 32 2 2 32
80 320 320 720 720 720
3A 3A 3A 3A 3A 3A
b l2 b a1 b a2 b lm4 b l−1 m4 b
5A 10A 15A 15B 20A 20A
Rlm4 × b lm4 × b R × b R × b lm4 × b lm4 × b
2 2 32 5 22 5 32 5 32 5 22 5 22 5
144 1296 576 576 1296 1296
5A 5A 5A 5A 5A 5A
mst lm4 mst
4F 4G
l2 × mst l2 × mst
23 23
3240 3240
4C 4C
m lm4 m
8A 8B
l2 × m l2 × m
24 24
1620 1620
8C 8C
m−1 lm4 m−1
8C 8D
l2 × m l2 × m
24 24
1620 1620
8D∗∗ 8D∗∗
NG D has order 3, it follows from the argument for Tables 2 and 3 that the splits over ZG. Thus, N D ∼ inverse image of NG D in G = 3 × NG D. G 3.5. Actions of Some Outer 2-Elements Lemma 3.2. The actions of r on the conjugacy classes of CG j, NG V , NG V p , NG R, and NG D are given as follows, with the notation above:
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TABLE 5 Conjugacy Classes of NG U = U F Rep. g
Name
Centralizer Cg ∩ NG U
Length
I e1 −I i3 e1 i3 i1 i2 i1 i3
1A 3A 2A 2B 6A 4B 4C
∼ 34 21+4 · F52 EF = − Eu2 ∼ = 32 × 32 4 F∼ = 2−1+4 · F52 e1 e4 u1 u2 i1 i2 ∼ = 32 4 × 4 2 e1 e4 u1 ∼ = 32 4 i1 i2 i3 i4 i1 nb −1 i1 i3 i2 i5 i2 nb
1 80 81 90 720 810 810
b b2 −b −b2
5A 5B 10A 10B
−I b ∼ = 10 −I b ∼ = 10 −I b ∼ = 10 −I b ∼ = 10
2592 2592 2592 2592
n u2 e1 u 2 e1 + e4 u2 −u2 i1 n i2 n
4E 4A 12A 12B 4D 8A 8B
i3 n ∼ =2×4 ∼ 32 4 × 4 e1 e4 u1 u2 = e1 e4 u2 ∼ = 32 × 4 e1 e4 u2 ∼ = 32 × 4 u1 u2 ∼ =4×4 i1 n ∼ =8 i2 n ∼ =8
3240 180 720 720 1620 3240 3240
2B × 3A x2 = −I ∈ 2A x2 = −I ∈ 2A
x2 = −I (in 2A) x2 = i3 ∈ 2B, x ∼ u1 3A × 4A 3A × 4A x2 = i3 ∈ 2B x2 = −i1 i5 ∈ 4B x2 = −i2 i4 ∈ 4C
(i) On the CG j-classes, 8A 8B20A 20B6B 6C8C 8D 16A 16C16B 16D. (ii) On the NG V -classes, 8A 8B16A 16B16C 16D12A 12B. (iii) On the NG V p -classes, 8A 8B8C 8D16A 16B16C 16D12A 12B. (iv) On the NG R-classes, 3C 3D20A 20B4F 4G8A 8D 8B 8C. (v) On the NG D-classes, 7B 7C2B 2C14B 14C6C 6E 6D 6F. Proof. In view of the representatives of the classes of NG D in Table 7, claim (v) is easily verified using Lemma 3.1(5). (iii) As r centralizes NG V /V (≥ NG V p /V ), we may assume that the representative τ of the NG V p -class 3A (see Table 3) is centralized by r, by replacing τ by its conjugate under V . It follows from Lemma 3.1(2) that sr is conjugate to sv1 under V , and so sv1 v3 r = sv1 r v3−1 is conjugate to sv3−1 under V . Thus, r induces 16A 16B and 16C 16D on the elements of order 16 of NG V p . As r inverts V , r stabilizes the classes 1A, 2A, 2B, 4X (X = A E) contained in V , as they are real classes. As r centralizes NG V p /V , r induces
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uno and yoshiara TABLE 6 Conjugacy Classes of NG R ∩ NG U
Rep.
Rep.
Name
Centralizer
Length
In NG R
1 l2 lm4 a
I −i3 = u21 u1 e1
1A 2A 4A 3A
4 × 32 4 2 4 × 32 4 32 × 32 4
1 9 18 8
1A 2A 4A 3A
1A 2B 4A 3A
m4 l 2 m4 l am4
i3 = u22 −I = u21 u22 u1 u22 e 1 i3
2B 2C 4C 6A
32 4 × 4 2 4 × 42 4×4 32 × 4
9 81 162 72
2B 2C 4C 6A
2B 2A 4D 6A
a! a 1 a! a 2 a! l 2 a! lm4 a! l−1 m4 a!
e2 e1 + e2 e1 + e4 + e2 e2 −i3 e2 u 1 e2 u1 −1
3B 3C 3D 6B 12A 12B
32 4 × 32 34 34 4 × 32 4 × 32 4 × 32
8 32 32 72 72 72
3B 3C 3D 6B 12B 12C
3A 3A 3A 6A 12A/B 12B/A
l 2 m2 m2 l−1 m−2 lm−2 a 1 l 2 m2 a2 l2 m2
u2 u21 u2 u1 u2 u−1 1 u2 e1 u 2 e1 + e4 u2
4B 4D 4E 4F 12C 12D
32 4 × 4 4×4 4×4 4×4 32 × 4 32 × 4
18 162 162 162 72 72
4B 4D 4E 4E 12A 12A
4A 4D 4C 4B 12A 12B
i 1 i2 i 2 i4 n −i3 n i1 i3
4G 4H 4I 4J
22 22 22 22
324 324 324 324
4F 4G 4F 4G
4B 4E 4E 4C
mst lm4 mst l2 m2 mst l2 m−2 mst
In NG U
at most the permutation 8A 8B8C 8D12A 12B on the elements of NG V p of order not equal to 16, in view of the orders and the size of the centralizers of representatives. As s2 r = s2 v2−1 v3−1 = s2 v1 v2 v1 v2 v3 (for the first equality, see the proof of Lemma 3.1), r interchanges the classes 8A and 8B. As stv1 r = str v1−1 = stv12 v22 v32 = stv3 v1 v2 by Lemma 3.1, r induces 8C 8D. As r centralizes τ and inverts x, we see that r induces 12A 12B. (ii) As r centralizes NG V /V , r stabilizes the two NG V -classes of order 7. As the remaining classes nontrivially intersect NG V p , in view of the fusion of the NG V p -classes in NG V (see Table 3), the arguments in the proof of (iii) also show that r induces the permutation 8A 8B16A 16B16C 16D12A 12B on the NG V -classes. (i) For the CG j-classes, the arguments in the proof of (iii) show that r induces at least the permutation 8A 8B8C 8D16A 16C16B 16D and that it stabilizes each class with a representative in V . Observing the
dade’s conjecture for the simple o’nan group
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TABLE 7 Conjugacy Classes of NG D Name
Rep.
Centralizer Length
1A 7A 7B
1 c c1
Dx c c1 xe
1 6 84
7C
c 1 c2 c 3
c c1 c2 e
84
7D
c1 c22
c c1 c22
168
2A 14A = 2A × 7A
x2 cx2
c a x e c x
49 294
4A 28A = 4A × 7A 28B = 4A × 7A
x cx c3 x
c a x c x c x
98 294 294
2B 14B = 2B × 7C
3
e c1 c2 e a e c1 c2 c 3 e c1 c2 e3 e
98 588
Name 2C 14C = 2C × 7B
Rep. Centralizer Length xe c1 xe
c1 a xe c1 xe
98 588
3A
a
a x e
343
3B
a
−1
a x e
343
6A = 2A × 3A
ax2
a x e
343
6B = 2A × 3B
a−1 x2
a x e
343
12A = 4A × 3A
ax
a x
686
12B = 4A × 3B
a−1 x
a x
686
6C = 2B × 3A
ae
a x2 e
686
6D = 2B × 3B
a−1 e
a x2 e
686
6E = 2C × 3A
axe
2
a x xe
686
6F = 2C × 3B
−1
2
686
a xe a x xe
orders and the size of the centralizers of representatives, the other possible permutations are at most 20A 20B, 28A 28B, and 6B 6C. As r induces an inverse-transpose automorphism on L3 4 ∼ = CG x/x (see the proof of [11, Lemma 1.14]), r centralizes an element b of CG x of order 5. Moreover, the element c in Lemma 3.1 is an element of order 7 in CG x inverted by r. Then bx and bx−1 are representatives of the classes 20A and 20B, which are flipped by r. Furthermore, r sends a representative cx to c −1 x−1 , which is conjugate to cx under some element in CG j \ CG x. Hence, r fixes the classes 28A and 28B. As r centralizes a ∈ R# and str = xst by Lemma 3.1, we have astr = astr = axst, whence r flips 6B and 6C. (iv) Note first that r flips the classes 8C and 8D∗∗ of M10 ∼ = NG R/CG K but stabilizes the other classes. From Lemma 3.1, we have mr = lm4 m−1 ∈ 8D and mstr = l−1 m3 · l2 m2 st = lm5 st ∈ 4G. Thus, r induces the permutation 4F 4G8A 8D8B 8C on the classes outside CG K × K. Observing the orders and the sizes of the centralizers of representatives for classes corresponding to each coset of CG K stabilized by r, it is immediate to see that r induces at most the following permutations on the classes of NG R contained in CG K × K 3C 3D12B 12C15A 15B 20A 20B. As Kr ∼ = D10 . Taking an element b ∈ K = PGL2 9, we have CK r ∼ of order 5 centralized by r, a representative lm4 b of 20A is sent by r to
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uno and yoshiara
lm4 −1 b ∈ 20B. As lm4 r ∼ = D8 does not act fixed point freely on R ∼ = 32 , # 4 it is not transitive on R , and r preserves each of the two lm -orbits on R# (with representatives a1 and a2 ). This implies that r stabilizes the classes 15A and 15B, as they are represented by a1 b and a2 b. On the other hand, since Kr ∼ = PGL2 9, r interchanges the permutation types of elements of K ∼ = A6 of order 3. Hence, the image a! r of an element a! ∈ R⊥ # can be written as a! g for some element g ∈ NG R outside CG K × K. Since −1 rg−1 g interchanges two lm4 -orbits on R# , we see that a1 a! rg = a1 a! is conjugate to a2 a! under NG R, and hence a1 a! r lies in the class 3D. −1 −1 Thus, r induces 3C 3D. This also shows that lm4 a! rg = lm4 rg a! = −1 lm4 −1 g a! . As an element of NG R outside CG K × K inverts lm4 −1 −1 modulo R, lm4 −1 g is conjugate to lm4 a! under R. Hence, lm4 a! rg and so lm4 a! r lie in the class represented by lm4 a! , and r stabilizes the classes 12B and 12C. Lemma 3.3. The actions of mr on the conjugacy classes of NG U and NG R ∩ NG U are as follows, with the notation above: (i)
On the NG U-classes, 4B 4C5A 5B10A 10B8A 8C.
(ii) On 4H 4I.
the
NG R ∩ NG U-classes,
4E 4F3C 3D4G 4J
Proof. The element mr also induces a nondegenerate linear transformation on U = GF34 stabilizing two subspaces R = e1 e4 and R⊥ = e2 e3 . Thus, it is of the shape e1 → ae1 + be4 e2 → αe2 + βe3 e3 → γe2 + δe3 e4 → ce1 + de4 for some a b c d α β γ δ ∈ GF3. We may further restrict the shape of mr, using the equation mr2 = lm4 −1 and the fact that mr inverts x in Lemma 3.1(1) and (3). As we saw above, the explicit matrix shapes ±1 for lm4 −1 and x are explicitly known as u±1 1 and u2 , respectively. The calculation shows that each of the actions of mr on R and R⊥ have four possibilities in matrix form with respect to e1 e4 and e2 e3 a b 1 1 =± c d −1 1 or its transpose
α γ
β δ
=±
1 0
0 −1
or
±
0 1
1 0
Thus, in total, there are 16 possible matrix shapes for mr. However, we can verify that they are all the same modulo u1 u2 . Hence, in order to check
dade’s conjecture for the simple o’nan group
167
the action of NA U = NG Umr on the conjugacy classes of NG U, we may assume that mr is one of those 16 possible shapes, for example, mr e1 → e1 + e4 e2 → e2 e3 → −e3 e4 → −e1 + e4 The same remark is applied to the action of NA U ∩ NA R = Uu1 u2 i1 i2 mr on the conjugacy classes of NG R ∩ NG U. Now claims (i) and (ii) above can be verified by straightforward calculations on the transformations representing classes in Tables 6 and 7. From the above information, it is immediate to determine the actions of r on the conjugacy classes of G (see [2, p. 133] or [11, Table 2] for the character table). In view of the lengths and the orders of representatives, r stabilizes all classes except possibly those of elements of order 8, 16, 15, 19, 20, 28, and 31. As CG r ∼ = J1 contains a Sylow 19-subgroup of G, r stabilizes all classes 19A 19D. By the Sylow theorem, r exchanges 31A and 31B. On the other classes, the actions of r can be read from Lemmas 3.1–3.3, as those classes intersect some of the local subgroups examined in this section and the fusions of these local subgroups in G are easily determined. The results are summarized as follows. Lemma 3.4. classes of G:
The involution r induces the following permutation on the
8A 8B16A 16B16C 16D20A 20B31A 31B Finally, we describe the precise action on V of an element τ in NG V p of order 3 in Tables 2 and 3. In Section 5, this information is used to calculate the action of NG V p on the irreducible characters of V . Lemma 3.5. If τ is an element of order 3 of NG V p cyclically permuting three cosets s2 V , s2 tV , and tV in this ordering, then we may assume that the following hold, replacing τ by its suitable conjugates under s2 tV and the elements vi simultaneously by vi x2 i = 1 2 3, if necessary. v2τ = v2 v3−1
v1τ = v2
v3τ = v1−1 v2 v3−1
Proof. For brevity, we set W = v2 v ∈ V and wi = vi2 (i = 1 2 3). As τ normalizes CV s2 V s2 tV tV = CV s2 t = x ∼ = 4, it centralizes x. As τ−1 s2 τ ≡ s2 t and τ−1 tτ ≡ s2 modulo V , we have ∗
2
vs τ = vτ s 2
2
t
and
vt τ = vτ s
2
for all v ∈ V
Note that τt and τs induce the same permutation s2 V s2 tV tV as τ, because s2 t fixes all those cosets.
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As τ permutes CW s2 V = x2 w1 w2 , CW s2 tV = x2 w1 , and CW tV = x2 w2 , in this ordering, we have w1τ = w2 x2α and w2τ = 2 w1 w2 x2β for some α β = 0 1. As w1t = w2 x2 , w2t = w2 , w1s = w2 x2 , and s2 w2 = w2 x2 , we may assume α = 0 and β = 1, replacing τ by τt and 2 then τs if necessary. Thus, w1τ = w2 , w2τ = w2 x2 = w1 w2 w3 . Taking the roots in V of those equations, we have v1τ = v2 w and v2τ = 2 −1 ! v v3 w for some w w! ∈ W . As xτ = x, we then have v3τ = x−1 v1 v22 τ = x−1 v2 ww2 w3 = v1−1 v2 v3−1 w. Putting v = v1 and v2 in the first equation in ∗, we have
2
v1s
τ
2
2
2
= v3τ = v1−1 v2 v3−1 w equals v1τ s t = v2 ws t = v1−1 v2 v3−1 ws t s 2 t s2 τ −1 τ 2 2 v2 = v1 v2 v3 = v1−1 v2 w! equals v2τ s t = v2 v3−1 w! = v1−1 v2 w! s t Thus, w w! ∈ CW s2 t. Similarly, from the last equation in ∗ for v = v1 and v2 , we have w w! ∈ CW t. Hence, w w! ∈ CW s2 t = x2 . In particular, they are centralized by V s t τ. We may verify that the action of τsτ on W coincides with that of s−1 t by examining their actions on the basis wi (i = 1 2 3). As CG W = V , −1 their actions on V are identical as well. In particular, we have v2τsτ = v2s t . Calculating both sides, we have w = 1. Thus, v1τ = v2 , v2τ = v2 v3−1 w! , and v3τ = v1−1 v2 v3−1 for some w! ∈ x2 . g Now note that, for g ∈ s t and every i = 1 2 3, vi is a product of an odd number of vj±1 ’s (see [11, Lemma 2.1]). As x2 is a central involution of V s t, the action of g on the basis vi x2 (i = 1 2 3) has the identical form as that on the basis vi (i = 1 2 3). However, as v2τ = v2 v3−1 w! , we have v2 x2 τ = v2 x2 v3 x2 −1 w! x2 . Hence, replacing vi by vi x2 (i = 1 2 3) if necessary, we may assume that w! = 1, without altering the actions of elements s and t.
4. DADE’S CONJECTURE FOR THE O’NAN SIMPLE GROUP (See Section 3.3.) Fix a We identify the two sets p G and p G. = 1 ξ ξ−1 . nontrivial irreducible character ξ of ZG. Then IrrZG let IrrHζ For ζ ∈ IrrZG and a subgroup H of G containing ZG, denote the set of irreducible characters of H lying over ζ. The automorphism r in Lemma 3.1 sends ξ to ξ−1 . In particular, it gives a bijection from IrrHξ to IrrH r ξ−1 . has 80 irreducible characters of which 30 As is shown in the Atlas, G in their kernels. Thus, G has 30 irreducible characters. The have ZG are distributed into IrrG1, −1 as characters of G IrrGξ, and IrrGξ
dade’s conjecture for the simple o’nan group follows:
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= χ χ χ IrrG = IrrG1 1 2 30 IrrGξ = χ χ χ 31
32
55
−1 = χ∗ χ∗ χ∗ IrrGξ 32 31 55 Here we use the same suffixes as in the Atlas not as in Tables 2 and 4 in [11]. Since ξr = ξ−1 , we have χri = χ∗i for all i with 31 ≤ i ≤ 55. Also, χ3 χ4 ,
χ5 χ6 , χ8 χ9 , χ13 χ14 , χ16 χ17 are A-orbits and the other orbits consist of a single element. (Here χ3 1 = 13376, χ5 1 = 25916, χ8 1 = 32395, χ13 1 = 58311, χ16 1 = 64790.) See Lemma 3.4. is contained in one of Note that, if p = 3, then each p-block of G −1 IrrG1, IrrGξ, or IrrGξ . Moreover, a p-block of G can and will be (V.4.3 of [5]). If p = 3, then each p-block B of regarded as a p-block of G and we have B =B of G, ∩ IrrG1 G is contained in a unique p-block B (V.4.4 of [5]). Thus, when we count the numbers of characters, we look at rather than that of G. In particular, in Section 6 below, of G a 3-block B d etc. to mean kG B ∩ IrrG1 we roughly use kG B d. With this convention, we deal only with p-blocks of G in the rest of this paper. This applies also for the normalizers of chains. Furthermore, by Lemmas 2.2 and 2.3, the following holds. such that the order pdB of Lemma 4.1. If we show, for all p-blocks of G a defect group of B is greater than the p-part of Z and for all d, that −1C kNG C B d A = 0 in the case of E = A C∈p G/G
−1C kNG C B d = 0
C∈p G/G
−1C kNGC B d ξ = 0
G C∈p G/
then Conjecture 2.1 holds for G. When considering the action of outer automorphisms, it suffices to treat p-radical chains of G (see Section 3.3). We have studied those actions on the normalizers of certain chains of G in the previous section. 5. THE CASE OF p = 2 In this section, we assume that p = 2. 5.1. Radical 2-Subgroups and Radical 2-Chains RepBy Section 3.3, radical subgroups of G are exactly those of G. resentatives of G-conjugacy classes of radical 2-subgroups P of G and
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their centers ZP and NG P/P are as follows, where j = x2 = v12 v32 . See Theorem 15 of [16]. P
ZP
NG P/P
V2 = v12 v32 st ∼ = 22 V = v1 v2 v3 ∼ =4×4×4 V @ = V22 x = v1 v22 v3−1 4A C p = x24 C p@ = x22+4 C 2 = x2 C 2p@ = x22+4 2
V2 V V2 x x x j ∼ =2 j ∼ =2
32 4 × S3 L3 2 S3 L3 4 2 L2 4 S3 3 2 Q8 1
We examine the following radical 2-chains first: C0 1 C1 1 < V2 < · · · C2 1 < V < · · · C3 1 < V @ < · · · C4 1 < x Consider the chains 1 < V2 < · · · . Since NG V2 is a subgroup of NG K, it follows from Section 3.1.2 that NG V2 = R@m4 × NK V2 ∼ = beginning 32 4 × S4 . Hence, representatives of radical 2-chains of G with 1 < V2 are C10 1 < V2 C11 1 < V2 < V2 4 × 1
NGC10 = 31+2 + 4 × S4
C12 1 < V2 < V2 1 × 2
NGC11 = 3 × 4 × S4 NGC12 = 31+2 + 4 × D8
C13 1 < V2 < V2 4 × 2
NGC13 = 3 × 4 × D8
C14 1 < V2 < V2 4 × 1 < V2 4 × 2
NGC14 = 3 × 4 × D8
C15 1 < V2 < V2 1 × 2 < V2 4 × 2
NGC15 = 3 × 4 × D8
In the above table, 4 and D8 correspond to @m4 and x st, respectively. It follows from Lemma 3.1 that the involution r normalizes each chain C1i for 0 ≤ i ≤ 5 and its normalizer in G. Moreover, it normalizes the 4, 3 × 4, S4 , and D8 in NGQ. Thus, to compute the direct factors 31+2 + numbers of characters of NGQ, it suffices to consider the groups S4 and D8 . Since any automorphism of S4 is inner, r preserves conjugacy classes of S4 . Moreover, since r has order 2, it preserves conjugacy classes of D8 , too.
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Thus, we have 5 i=0
−1C1i kNGC1i B d ζ =
5 i=0
−1C1i kNGC1i B d A ζ = 0
and all d and ζ. for all 2-blocks B of G Consider the chains 1 < V < · · · . Since NG V /V ∼ = L3 2, whose beginning Sylow 2-subgroup is D8 , representatives of radical 2-chains of G with 1 < V are C20 1 < V C21 1 < V < V
NGC20 = 3 × V L3 2 p
NGC21 = 3 × VS4
C22 1 < V < V @
NGC22 = 3 × V @ S3
C23 1 < V < V D8
NGC23 = 3 × VD8
C24 1 < V < V
p
< V D8
NGC24 = 3 × VD8
C25 1 < V < V @ < V D8
NGC25 = 3 × VD8
Note that V D8 is a Sylow 2-subgroup of G and that V p and V @ are not r-conjugate. Consider the chains 1 < V @ < · · · . Since NG V @ /V @ ∼ = S3 , represen beginning with 1 < V @ are tatives of radical 2-chains of G C30 1 < V @
NGC30 = 3 × V @ S3
C31 1 < V @ < V @ 2 = V D8
NGC31 = 3 × VD8
It follows that NGC22 = NGC30 and NGC25 = NGC31 . Since the length of C22 and C30 have different parity, these two do not contribute the alternating sum. The chains C25 and C31 do not either. Consider the chains 1 < C p < · · · . Since NG C p ≤ NG ZC p = NG x = CG v12 v32 , it follows from Lemma 2.4 that there exists a bijection
C 1 < C p < · · · C ≥ 1 → C ! 1 < x < C p < · · · C ! ≥ 2 sending any radical chain 1 < C p < · · · to the radical chain 1 < x < C p < · · · . Similar bijections exist for chains 1 < C p@ < · · · , 1 < C 2 < · · ·, and 1 < C 2p@ < · · · . They preserve the normalizers of the correspond and in A. Hence, the cancellations occur among those ing chains in G chains and only C4 1 < x remains. Hence, we have the following.
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Proposition 5.1. To prove that the conjecture holds for G and p = 2, it suffices to consider the alternating sum with respect to the following radical 2-chains: C0 1
NGC0 = G
C4 1 < x
ˆ ∼ NGC4 = CGj = 122 L3 4 21
C20 1 < V
NGC20 = 3 × NG V ∼ = 3 × V L3 2
C21 1 < V < V p
NGC21 = 3 × NG V p ∼ = 3 × VS4
Recall that the above chains are all r-invariant by Lemma 3.1(1), (2), and (5). 5.2. 2-Blocks of G found in the Atlas, it follows that G has From the character table of G nineteen 2-blocks B0 = B0 G = χ2 χ3 χ4 χ7 χ10 χ23 χ24 χ26 χ27 χ28 B B! = χ31 χ32 χ50 χ51 χ52 χ53 χ54 χ55 B!! = B! ∗ = χ∗31 χ∗32 χ∗50 χ∗51 χ∗52 χ∗53 χ∗54 χ∗55 In general, the principal block of a group H is denoted by B0 H. Here −1 , and those are of defect B0 ⊆ IrrG1, B! ⊆ IrrGξ, and B!! ⊆ IrrGξ is of order 8. 9 and each has 20 characters. The defect group of B is a tame block, the invariant form of the conjecture is true Because B by [14]. Hence, it suffices to consider B0 , B! , and B!! . The character table tells us also that we have of G B! d ξ = kG B!! d ξ−1 kG B0 d = kG and d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
d=5
d=4
Other d
8
6
3
1
0
2
0
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
d=5
d=4
Other d
4
4
1
1
0
2
0
kG B0 d
Moreover, we have kG B0 d A
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ˆ 5.3. 2-Blocks of CGj with jZ = j (see Section 3.3). ˆ G Recall that jˆ is the involution of G ˆ The character table of CGj = 122 L3 4 21 is available in the Atlas. The The group has central subgroup of order 3 can be identified with ZG. 83 irreducible characters which are distributed into 2-blocks as follows: 1 ˆ ˆ ∪B = IrrCG j = B0 CGj (disjoint) Irr CGj1 ! −1 !! ˆ ˆ = B1 Irr CGjξ Irr CGjξ = B1 ˆ B1! , and B1!! are blocks of defect 9 and each has 26 characHere B0 CGj, 1 is a tame block whose defect group has order 8. ters, and the block B B! G = B! , B!! G = B!! , and ˆ G = B0 G, It is obvious that B0 CGj 1 1 Thus, the character table tells us that 1 G = B. B ˆ B! d ξ = k C j ˆ B!! d ξ−1 kCG j B0 d = k CGj G and kCG j B0 d
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
d=5
d=4
Other d
8
6
5
5
0
2
0
Moreover, by Lemma 3.2(i), among characters of CG j the characters of degree 36, 90, and 56 and four characters of degree 35 are not r-invariant. Thus, we have d = 9 d = 8 d = 7 d = 6 d = 5 d = 4 Other d kCG j B0 d A
4
4
3
3
0
2
0
5.4. 2-Blocks of NG V The order of NG V is 29 · 3 · 7. Since it has a normal self-centralizing 2-subgroup, it has only the principal 2-block. (See V.3.11 of [5].) We have Irr3 × NG V 1 = IrrNG V = B0 3 × NG V Irr 3 × NG V ξ−1 = B2!! Irr3 × NG V ξ = B2! Here B0 3 × NG V , B2! , and B2!! are blocks of defect 9. Moreover, it is B! G = B! , and B!! G = B!! . The clear that B0 3 × NG V G = B0 G, 2 2 character table of NG V = V L3 2 can be found in [11, Table 3]. It yields that kNG V B0 d = k3 × NG V B! d ξ = k 3 × NG V B!! d ξ−1 and kNG V B0 d
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
Other d
8
6
3
1
0
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Lemma 3.2(ii) gives the action of r on the conjugacy classes of NG V . Thus, in the notation of Table 3 of [11], irreducible characters which are not r-invariant are χ7 , χ8 , χ10 , χ11 , χ12 , χ13 , χ16 , and χ17 . The degree of each character in the pairs is 7, 21, 42, and 28, respectively. Hence, from the character table, we have
kNG V B0 d A
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
Other d
4
4
1
1
0
5.5. 2-Blocks of NG V p The order of NG V p = VS4 is 29 · 3. Since NG V p has a normal self-centralizing 2-subgroup, it has only the principal 2-block (see V.3.11 of [5]). We have Irr 3 × NG V p 1 = Irr NG V p = B0 3 × NG V p Irr 3 × NG V p ξ = B3! Irr 3 × NG V p ξ−1 = B3!! Here B0 3 × NG V p , B3! , and B3!! are blocks of defect 9. Moreover, it B! G = B! , and B!! G = B!! . is clear that B0 3 × NG V p G = B0 G, 3 3 p The characters of NG V can be obtained in the following way. At first, the conjugacy classes of NG V p are computed as in Table 3. The normal subgroup V = v1 v2 v3 of NG V p has characters θ1 , θ2 , θ3 defined by √ a √ b √ c θ1 v1a v2b v3c = −1 θ2 v1a v2b v3c = −1 θ3 v1a v2b v3c = −1 and every irreducible character of V can be written as θ1a θ2b θ3c . The actions of s and t on V are described in Lemma 2.1 of [11]. By Lemma 3.5, we may assume that v1τ = v2 , v2τ = v2 v3−1 , and v3τ = v1−1 v2 v3−1 . These yield also that sτ4 and tτ3 act trivially on V . Since NG V p is generated by v1 , v2 , v3 , s, t, and τ, it is easy to determine the NG V p -orbits of IrrV as follows:
1V 1 = θ12 θ22 θ32 θ22 θ12 θ32 2 = θ12 θ32 θ12 θ22 θ22 θ32 3 = θ1 θ3 θ1 θ2 θ2 θ3 θ13 θ33 θ13 θ23 θ23 θ33 4 = θ1 θ33 θ13 θ3 θ2 θ23 θ1 θ2 θ3 θ13 θ23 θ33 5 = θ1 θ22 θ33 θ13 θ22 θ3 θ1 θ23 θ3 θ13 θ2 θ33 θ12 θ23 θ32 θ12 θ2 θ32 6 = θ1 θ23 θ33 θ13 θ23 θ3 θ13 θ2 θ3 θ1 θ2 θ33 θ1 θ22 θ3 θ13 θ33 θ13 θ22 θ33 θ1 θ3 θ23 θ32 θ12 θ23 θ2 θ32 θ12 θ2 7 = all the other 24 irreducible characters
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The stabilizers Stabθ of them are given by Stab θ12 θ22 θ32 /V = s tV/V ∼ = D8 Stabθ1 θ2 /V = τV/V ∼ = 3 3 2 Stab θ1 θ2 θ3 /V = s stV/V ∼ = 2 × 2 2 2 Stab θ1 θ2 /V = st τV/V ∼ = S3 Stabθ1 θ2 θ3 /V = sV/V ∼ = 4 3 3 Stab θ1 θ2 θ3 /V = stV/V ∼ = 2 Let θ = θ12 θ22 θ32 . Then V/Ker θ has order 2 and is generated by v1 . Since s = v1 v3 ∈ Ker θ, we have Stabθ/Ker θ ∼ = 2 × D8 . Thus, θ is extendible to Stabθ and Clifford theory tells us that the degrees of irreducible characters of NG V p lying over θ are 3, 3, 3, 3, 6. For convenience, we write it as IrrNG V p θ = 3 3 3 3 6. For θ = θ12 θ22 , the group st τV/V is isomorphic to S3 and thus θ is extendible to Stabθ. (See 5.20 of [8].) The characters θ1 θ2 , θ1 θ2 θ3 , and θ1 θ23 θ33 are clearly extendible to their stabilizers. Hence, we have Irr NG V p θ12 θ22 = 4 4 8 Irr NG V p θ1 θ2 θ3 = 6 6 6 6 Irr NG V p θ1 θ2 = 8 8 8 Irr NG V p θ1 θ23 θ33 = 12 12 4
Let θ = θ1 θ23 θ3 . Then V/Ker θ is generated by v1 v3 = s4 . Thus, Stabθ/ Ker θ ∼ = D8 , and Stabθ has only one irreducible character lying over θ, whose degree is 2. Thus, IrrNG V p θ = 12. Finally, for θ ∈ 7 , we have IrrNG V p θ = 24. Hence, it follows that k NG V p B0 d = k 3 × NG V p B! d ξ = k 3 × NG V p B!! d ξ−1 and kNG V
p
B0 d
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
8
6
5
5
Other d 0 p
The action of r on the set of conjugacy classes of NG V is given by Lemma 3.2(iii). Moreover, it inverts each element of V . Let θ = θ12 θ22 θ32 . Then we have Stabθ/Ker θ ∼ = v1 × ¯s t¯ ∼ = 2 × D8 , where the overbars denote those elements modulo Ker θ. Let
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λ ∈ IrrStabθθ with λ1 = 1. There are four such λ. Then, by routine computation, the character value at s2 v for v in V is p λNG V s2 v = λs2 θv + λs2 tv! θτvτ−1 + θτsvs−1 τ−1 where v! is the element in V with τs2 τ−1 = tv! . In particular, we have p p λNG V s2 = λs2 + 2λtv! and λNG V s2 v1 v2 = λs2 − 2λtv! Since λtv! = 0 and since the conjugacy classes of s2 and s2 v1 v2 are interp changed by r (Lemma 3.2), the character λNG V is not r-invariant. 2 2 ¯ ∼ Let θ = θ1 θ2 . Then Stabθ/Ker θ ∼ = v1 × st τ = 4 × S3 . For λ ∈ NG V p stv = λstv + IrrStabθθ with λ1 = 1, we similarly obtain λ λs2 stvs−2 for all v ∈ V . In particular, it follows that p λNG V stv1 = λst θv1 + θ v1 v32 = −2λst p λNG V stv3 = λst θv3 + θ v12 v3 = 2λst p
Hence, λNG V is not r-invariant. ¯ ∼ Let θ = θ1 θ2 . Then Stabθ/Ker θ ∼ = v1 × τ = 4 × 3. For λ ∈ IrrStabθθ, we have λ1 = 1. Similarly, we obtain √ √ p λNG V τv1 v22 v33 = λτ −13 + λτ−1 θv! −1 √ √ p λNG V τv13 v22 v3 = λτ −1 + λτ−1 θv! −13 p
where v! is the element in V with stτst = τ−1 v! . Hence, λNG V is not r-invariant, if λτ is a primitive cube root of unity. Namely, exactly two of those in IrrNG V p θ are not r-invariant. Let θ = θ1 θ2 θ3 . Then Stabθ/Ker θ = v1 ∗ s/Ker θ ∼ = 4 ∗ 8, where the involutions in 4 and 8 are identified. For λ ∈ IrrStabθθ, we have λ1 = 1. We obtain λNG V
p
sv = λsθv + λs7 θtvt
for all v ∈√V . Note that λs is a primitive eighth root of unity. Let ε p be exp2π −1/8. Then, depending on λs, the values λNG V sv are determined as √ 2 if λs = ε, √ − 2 if λs = ε3 , p λNG V s = √ − 2 if λs = ε5 , √ 2 if λs = ε7 ,
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177
√ − 2 if λs = ε, √ − 2 if λs = ε3 , p λNG V sv1 = √ 2 if λs = ε5 , √ 2 if λs = ε7 . Since the automorphism r sends the conjugacy class of s to that of sv1 , the p character λNG V is not r-invariant if λs is ε or ε5 . (See Lemma 3.2.) Since exactly 10 conjugacy classes of NG V p are not r-invariant (Lemma 3.2), the characters which are not r-invariant are exactly those 10 found above. Hence, we have kNG V p B0 d A
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
Other d
4
4
3
3
0
5.6. Conjecture Table 8 gives the results for B and ζ such that B ζ lies in B0 1, B! ξ B!! ξ−1 . For other choices of B ζ and d, the numbers of relevant characters are all 0. Similarly, Table 9 gives the results for B0 . Hence, by Lemma 4.1 and Proposition 5.1, Conjecture 2.1 holds for G in the case of p = 2. TABLE 8 d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
d=5
d=4
Parity
8 8 8 8
6 6 6 6
3 5 3 5
1 5 1 5
0 0 0 0
2 2 0 0
+ − − +
B d ζ kG ˆ B d ζ kCGj k3 × NG V B d ζ k3 × NG V p B d ζ
TABLE 9
kG B0 d A kCG j B0 d A kNG V B0 d A kNG V p B0 d A
d=9
d=8
d=7
d=6
d=5
d=4
Parity
4 4 4 4
4 4 4 4
1 3 1 3
1 3 1 3
0 0 0 0
2 2 0 0
+ − − +
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In this section, we assume that p = 3. 6.1. Radical 3-Subgroups and Radical 3-Chains are extraspecial groups 31+4 Sylow 3-subgroups of G of order 35 and + exponent 3, and those of G are elementary abelian of order 34 . We know that any two elements of G of order 3 are G-conjugate. Moreover, the centralizer in G of an element of order 3 is isomorphic to R × A6 , and R is a T.I. set in G. Thus, there is no radical 3-subgroup of G of order 3. The group R is clearly a radical subgroup of G. If a subgroup P of U = RR⊥ is not contained in R, then it follows from Proposition 3.4 of [15] that U ≤ NG P ≤ NG U. Moreover, if P is radical in G, then P = U. Hence, representatives of G-conjugacy classes of radical 3-subgroups P of G and NG P are R = 32 NG R = 32 4 × A6 2 1+4 U = 34 NG U = 34 2− D10 Note that A normalizes each of the above. From the above, we have the following. Proposition 6.1. Representatives of G-conjugacy classes of radical are as follows. Here R and U are the inverse images of R and 3-chains of G respectively. U in G,
C0 ZG < R C1 ZG
< U C2 ZG
NGC0 = G NGC1 = 3 32 4 × A6 2 1+4 NGC2 = 31+4 D10 + 2
NGC3 = 31+4 + 4 × 4 2 is r-invariant and N U and N R ∩ N U are Recall that NGR G G G mr-invariant. 6.2. 3-Blocks of G has the following 3-blocks (see The character table tells us that G also [7]): B = B G 0 !
0
B = χ2 χ11 χ12 χ13 χ14 χ15 χ35 χ∗35 χ36 χ∗36 χ37 χ∗37 χ42 χ∗42 χ43 χ∗43
χ21 χ46 χ∗46 χ22 χ47 χ∗47 χ25 χ50 χ∗50 χ26 χ51 χ∗51
χ27 χ52 χ∗52 χ28 χ53 χ∗53
The block B0 is of defect 5, B! is of defect 3, and the other blocks are of defect 1. Thus, from [4], it suffices to consider B0 and B! .
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179
tells us that we have The character table of G 18 if d = 5, 6 if d = 3, kG B! d = kG B0 d = 0 otherwise, 0 otherwise, B d ξ = k G B d ξ−1 = 14 if d = 3, kG 0 0 0 otherwise, B! d ξ = k G B! d ξ−1 = 5 if d = 2, kG 0 otherwise. On the other hand, we have
kG B0 d A = !
kG B d A =
10 if d = 5, 0 otherwise, 4 0
if d = 3, otherwise.
6.3. 3-Blocks of NGR ∼ The character table of NGR = 3 NG R ∼ = 3 32 4 × A6 2 is available in the GAP library. It has 68 irreducible characters. In the notation of the GAP, we have the following 3-blocks. (Note: This group is a maximal and available as “3.ONM5” in the GAP.) subgroup of G B0 NGR B1! = χ5 χ6 χ13 χ14 χ18 χ25 χ47 χ48 χ49 χ50 χ51 χ52 χ53 χ54 χ65 χ66 is of defect 5, and B! is of defect 3. It is clear The block B0 NGR 1 and B! induce B0 and B! , respectively. The character table that B0 NGR 1 tells us that we have of NGR 24 if d = 5, kNG R B0 d = 0 otherwise, 6 if d = 3, kNG R B! d = 0 otherwise, B0 d ξ = k N R B0 d ξ−1 = 14 if d = 3, k NGR G 0 otherwise, B! d ξ = k N R B! d ξ−1 = 5 if d = 2, k NGR G 0 otherwise. The action of r on the Lemma 3.2(iv). Among the χ9 , χ10 , χ13 , χ14 , χ20 , χ21 , χ7 1 = χ8 1 = 10, χ9 1 =
conjugacy classes of NG R is given by irreducible characters of NG R, χ7 , χ8 , χ29 , and χ30 are not r-invariant. (Here χ10 1 = 1, χ13 1 = χ14 1 = 9, χ20 1 =
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χ21 1 = 16, χ29 1 = χ30 1 = 40.) Thus, we have 16 if d = 5, kNG R B0 d A = 0 otherwise, 4 if d = 3, kNG R B! d A = 0 otherwise. 6.4. 3-Blocks of NGU 1+4 ∼ The character table of NGU = 3+ 21+4 D10 is available in the GAP library. It has 46 irreducible characters. In the notation of the GAP, we and have the following. (Note: This group is a maximal subgroup of G available as “3.ONM6” in the GAP.) This group has only the principal 3-block B0 NGU, which, of course, induces B0 . Thus, the number of characters concerning B! is always 0. Since NG U has abelian normal Sylow 3-subgroup, the degree of an irreducible character of NG U is not divisible tells us that we have by 3. The character table of NGU 18 if d = 5, kNG U B0 d = 0 otherwise, 14 if d = 3, −1 k NGU B0 d ξ = k NGU B0 d ξ = 0 otherwise. The action of mr on the conjugacy classes of NG U is given by Lemma 3.3(i). Among the irreducible characters of NG U, eight of them are not mr-invariant. Thus, we have 10 if d = 5, kNG U B0 d A = 0 otherwise.
∩ N U 6.5. 3-Blocks of NGR G 1+4 ∩ N U ∼ We have NGR = 3+ 4 × 4 2, where 4 × 4 2 is G 4 @m × x · mst. Since NG R ∩ NG U has only the principal 3-block ∩ N U (V.4.4 of [5]). The principal 3-block (V.3.11 of [5]), so does NGR G B0 NGR ∩ NGU, of course, induces B0 . Thus, the number of characters concerning B! is always 0. Since NG R ∩ NG U has abelian normal Sylow 3-subgroup, the degree of an irreducible character of NG R ∩ NG U is not divisible by 3. Since NG R ∩ NG U has 24 conjugacy classes, we have 24 if d = 5, kNG R ∩ NG U B0 d = 0 otherwise. The action of mr on the set of conjugacy classes of NG R ∩ NG U is given by Lemma 3.3(ii). From this we get 16 if d = 5, kNG R ∩ NG U B0 A d = 0 otherwise.
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TABLE 10 d=5 kG B0 d kNG R B0 d kNG U B0 d kNG R ∩ NG U B0 d
18 24 18 24
B d ξ kG 0 B0 d ξ kNGR B0 d ξ kNGU ∩ N U B0 d ξ kNGR G
d=3
Parity
14 14 14 14
+ − − +
There is the unique irreducible character θ of 31+4 + lying over ξ. Its degree is 32 . Since ξ is invariant under the action of @m4 × x mst, the character θ is also invariant. Hence, it follows from 5.20 of [8] that θ is ∩ N U. This implies that the irreducible characextendible to NGR G ters of NGR ∩ NGU lying over θ, or, equivalently, lying over ξ, are in one-to-one correspondence with the irreducible characters of @m4 × x · mst. Moreover, the degrees of all of those characters have 3-parts 32 . Note that @m4 × x mst is a Sylow 2-subgroup of NG U by Lemma 1(4). In particular, an element in @m4 × x mst\@m4 × x inverts all the elements in @m4 × x (see Section 3.1.2). Thus, four irreducible characters of @m4 × x are invariant and each of them has two extensions to @m4 × x mst. The remaining 12 irreducible characters of @m4 × x are distributed into 6 orbits, each of which gives an irreducible character of @m4 × x mst of degree 2. Hence, we have ∩ N U B0 d ξ = k N R ∩ N U B0 d ξ−1 k NGR G G G 14 if d = 3, = 0 otherwise. 6.6. Conjecture From Sections 6.2–6.5, we have the results for the principle 3-block B0 of Gˆ shown in Table 10. Note that kNG C B0 d = 0 only for d = 5 and that kNGC B0 d ξ = kNGC B0 d ξ−1 = 0 only for d = 3. For the 3-block B! , we have the results shown in Table 11. Note that kNG C B! d = 0 only for d = 3 and that kNGC B! d ξ = kNGC B! d ξ−1 = 0 only for d = 2. For the numbers of characters invariant under the actions of the normalizers of the chains in A, we have the results shown in Table 12. Hence, by TABLE 11 d=3 kG B! d kNG R B! d kNG U B! d kNG R ∩ NG U B! d
6 6 0 0
B! d ξ kG B! d ξ kNGR B! d ξ kNGU ∩ N U B! d ξ kN R G
G
d=2
Parity
5 5 0 0
+ − − +
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uno and yoshiara TABLE 12 d=5
kG B0 d A kNG R B0 d A kNG U B0 d A kNG R ∩ NG U B0 d A
d=3
Parity
4 4 0 0
+ − − +
kG B! d A kNG R B! d A kNG U B! d A kNG R ∩ NG U B! d A
10 16 10 16
Lemma 4.1 and Proposition 6.1, Conjecture 2.1 holds for G in the case of p = 3. 7. THE CASE OF p = 7 In this section, we assume that p = 7. 7.1. Radical 7-Subgroups and Radical 7-Chains We follow the notation in [11, Sect. 6]. By Lemmas 6.4 and 6.5 of [11], it follows that G has two conjugacy classes of elements of order 7, represented by c and c ! . Lemmas 6.3(iii) and 6.4(v) in [11] tell us that neither c nor c ! is a radical 7-subgroup of G. On the other hand, G has three conjugacy classes of subgroups of order 72 (Lemma 6.4(ii) of [11]), denoted by E ! , E !! , and E !!! . By Lemma 6.5 of [11], E ! and E !! are radical 7-subgroups of G, while E !!! is not, since NG E !!! ≤ NG c. Representatives of G-conjugacy classes of radical 7-subgroups P of G and NG P/P are NG E ! /E ! ∼ = SL± 2 7 N E !! /E !! ∼ = SL± 2 7
E! E !! D=
G
1+2 7+
NG D/D
∼ = 3 × D8
By Section 3.3, representatives of G-conjugacy classes of radical 7 chains of G are described as follows. Here H1 and H2 are the normalizers of Sylow 7-subgroups of NG E ! /E ! and NG E !! /E !! , respectively. C0 1
NGC0 = G
C1 1 < E !
NGC1 = 3 × 72 SL± 2 7
C2 1 < E !!
NGC2 = 3 × 72 SL± 2 7
C3 1 < E ! < D
NGC3 = 3 × 72 H1
C4 1 < E !! < D
NGC4 = 3 × 72 H2
C5 1 < D
NGC5 = 3 × D 3 × D8
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Note that r interchanges E ! = c c1 and E !! = c c1 c2 , the two representatives of radical subgroups of G isomorphic to 72 . Thus, r also interchanges the normalizers of radical chains C3 and C4 . In particular, NA E ! = NG E ! , NA E !! = NG E !! and NA E ! ∩ NA D = NG E ! ∩ NG D, NA E !! ∩ NA D = NG E !! ∩ NG D. Moreover, for C above such that C = C0 , IrrNGC1, IrrNGCξ, and IrrNGCξ−1 are 7-blocks, which induce blocks contained in IrrG1, IrrGξ, −1 and IrrGξ , respectively. Hence, it follows from Proposition 2.5 that kNGC1 B d ζ = kNGC3 B d ζ kNGC2 B d ζ = kNGC4 B d ζ for any 7-block B of G and any d and ζ. Thus, the following holds. Proposition 7.1. To prove that the conjecture holds for G and p = 7, it suffices to consider the alternating sum with respect to the following radical 7-chains: C0 1
NGC0 = G
C5 1 < D
NGC5 ∼ = 3 × D 3 × D8 7.2. 7-Blocks of G
has the following eleven 7-blocks (see The character table tells us that G also [6]): χ χ χ χ χ χ B0 = B0 G 15 18 19 20 23 24 B! χ41
B!! χ∗41
−1 , and those and B! ⊆ IrrGξ, and B!! ⊆ IrrGξ Here B0 ⊆ IrrG1, tells are of defect 3 and each has 24 characters. The character table of G us also that 20 if d = 3, ! !! −1 kG B0 d = kG B d ξ = kG B d ξ = 4 if d = 2, 0 otherwise. Moreover, we have kG B0 d A =
10 4 0
if d = 3, if d = 2, otherwise.
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uno and yoshiara 7.3. 7-Blocks of NG D
The character table of NG D = D 3 × D8 is available in the GAP library, and it has 24 irreducible characters. In the notation of the GAP, we have the following. (Note: This group is available as “ONN7” in the GAP.) It follows that 3 × NG D has three 7-blocks: Irr3 × NG D1 = IrrNG D = B0 3 × NG D Irr 3 × NG Dξ−1 = B1!! Irr3 × NG Dξ = B1! Here B0 3 × NG D, B1! , and B1!! are blocks of defect 3. Moreover, it is B! G = B! , and B!! G = B!! . clear that B0 3 × NG DG = B0 G, 1 1 From the character table of NG D, it follows that kNG D B0 d = k3 × NG D B! d ξ
!!
= k 3 × NG D B d ξ
−1
=
20 if d = 3, 4 if d = 2, 0 otherwise.
Moreover, r normalizes NG D, and the action of r on the conjugacy classes of NG D is given by Lemma 3.2(v). Thus, in the notation in “ONN7,” r-orbits on IrrNG D are χ1 χ2 , χ5 χ6 , χ9 χ10 ,
χ16 χ18 , and χ17 χ19 and those consisting of a single element. (Here χ1 1 = χ5 1 = χ9 1 = 1, χ16 1 = χ17 1 = 12.) Thus, we have 10 if d = 3, kNG D B0 d A = 4 if d = 2, 0 otherwise. 7.4. Conjecture From the results in Sections 7.2 and 7.3 and Proposition 7.1, Conjecture 2.1 holds for G in the case of p = 7.
REFERENCES 1. J. An and E. O’Brien, The Alperin and Dade conjectures for the O’Nan and Rudivalis simple groups, Comm. Algebra, to appear. 2. J. H. Conway, R. T. Curtis, S. P. Norton, R. A. Parker, and R. A. Wilson, “Atlas of Finite Groups,” Clarendon, Oxford, 1985. 3. E. C. Dade, Counting characters in blocks, II.9, in “Representation Theory of Finite Groups (Columbus, OH, 1995),” Ohio State University Mathematical Research Institute Publications, Vol. 6, pp. 45–59, de Gruyter, Berlin, 1997. 4. E. C. Dade, Counting characters in blocks with cyclic defect groups, I, J. Algebra 186 (1996), 934–969.
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5. W. Feit, “The Representation Theory of Finite Groups,” North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1982. 6. A. Henke, G. Hiss, and J. M¨ uller, The 7-modular decomposition matrices of the sporadic O’Nan group, J. London Math. Soc. 60 (1999), 58–70. 7. C. Jansen and R. A. Wilson, The 2-modular and 3-modular decomposition numbers of the sporadic simple O’Nan group and its triple cover, J. London Math. Soc. 57 (1998), 71–90. 8. A. Kerber, “The Representation Theory of the Symmetric Group,” Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 240, Springer-Verlag, Berlin/New York, 1971. 9. S. Kotlica, Verification of Dade’s conjecture for Janko group J3 , J. Algebra 187 (1997), 579–619. 10. J. B. Olsson and K. Uno, Dade’s conjecture for general linear groups in the defining characteristic, Proc. London Math. Soc. 72 (1996), 359–384. 11. M. O’Nan, Some evidence for the existence of a new simple group, Proc. London Math. Soc. 32 (1976), 421–479. 12. M. Sawabe, On the radical chains of finite groups, preprint. 13. H. Sukizaki, Dade’s conjecture for special linear groups in the defining characteristic, J. Algebra 220 (1999), 261–283. 14. K. Uno, Dade’s conjecture for tame blocks, Osaka J. Math. 31 (1994), 747–772. 15. S. Yoshiara, The maximal subgroups of the sporadic simple group of O’Nan, J. Fac. Sci. Univ. Tokyo Sect. IA Math. 32 (1985), 105–141. 16. S. Yoshiara, The radical 2-subgroups of some sporadic simple groups, preprint.