- Lyons group
In the
mathematical field ofgroup theory , the Lyons group "Ly" (whose existence was suggested byRichard Lyons in 1970), is a sporadicsimple group of order: 28 · 37 · 56 · 7 · 11 · 31 · 37 · 67 : = 51765179004000000: ≈ 5 · 10 16 .
Lyons characterized this number as the unique possible order of any finite simple group where the
centralizer of someinvolution isisomorphic to the nontrivial central extension of thealternating group A11 of degree 11 by thecyclic group C2. The existence of such a group and its uniqueness up to isomorphism was proved with a combination of permutation group theory and clever machine calculations by C. C. Sims. The group is also known as the Lyons-Sims group "LyS".When the McLaughlin sporadic simple group was discovered, it was noticed that a centralizer of one of its involutions was the perfect double cover of the
alternating group "A"8. This suggested considering the double covers of the other alternating groups "A""n" as possible centralizers of involutions in simple groups. The cases "n"≤7 are ruled out by theBrauer-Suzuki theorem , the case "n"=8 leads to the McLaughlin group, the case "n"=9 was ruled out byZvonimir Janko , Lyons himself ruled out the case "n"=10 and found the Lyons group for "n"=11, while the cases "n"≥12 were ruled out by J.G. Thompson and Ronald Solomon.The Lyons group can be described more concretely in terms of a
modular representation of dimension 111 over the field of five elements, or in terms of generators and relations, for instance those given by Gebhardt (2000).Ly is one of the 6 sporadic simple groups called the pariahs, those which are not found within the
monster group (as the order of the monster group is not divisible by 37 or 67).References
*R. Lyons, "Evidence for a new finite simple group", J. Algebra 20 (1972) 540-569 and 34 (1975) 188-189.
*Volker Gebhardt, "Two short presentations for Lyons' sporadic simple group", Experimental Mathematics, 9 (2000) no. 3, 333-338.External links
* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/LyonsGroup.html MathWorld: Lyons group]
* [http://brauer.maths.qmul.ac.uk/Atlas/v3/spor/Ly/ Atlas of Finite Group Representations: Lyons group]
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