March 2021 The spread of a finite group
Timothy C. Burness, Robert M. Guralnick, Scott Harper
Author Affiliations +
Ann. of Math. (2) 193(2): 619-687 (March 2021). DOI: 10.4007/annals.2021.193.2.5

Abstract

A group $G$ is said to be $\frac{3}{2}$-generated if every nontrivial element belongs to a generating pair. It is easy to see that if $G$ has this property, then every proper quotient of $G$ is cyclic. In this paper we prove that the converse is true for finite groups, which settles a conjecture of Breuer, Guralnick and Kantor from 2008. In fact, we prove a much stronger result, which solves a problem posed by Brenner and Wiegold in 1975. Namely, if $G$ is a finite group and every proper quotient of $G$ is cyclic, then for any pair of nontrivial elements $x_1,x_2 \in G$, there exists $y\in G$ such that $G = \langle x_1y\rangle = \langle x_2,y\rangle$. In other words, $s(G) \ge 2$, where $s(G)$ is the spread of $G$. Moreover, if $u(G)$ denotes the more restrictive uniform spread of $G$, then we can completely characterise the finite groups $G$ with $u(G) = 0$ and $u(G)=1$. To prove these results, we first establish a reduction to almost simple groups. For simple groups, the result was proved by Guralnick and Kantor in 2000 using probabilistic methods, and since then the almost simple groups have been the subject of several papers. By combining our reduction theorem and this earlier work, it remains to handle the groups with socle an exceptional group of Lie type, and this is the case we treat in this paper.

Citation

Download Citation

Timothy C. Burness. Robert M. Guralnick. Scott Harper. "The spread of a finite group." Ann. of Math. (2) 193 (2) 619 - 687, March 2021. https://doi.org/10.4007/annals.2021.193.2.5

Information

Published: March 2021
First available in Project Euclid: 23 December 2021

Digital Object Identifier: 10.4007/annals.2021.193.2.5

Subjects:
Primary: 20E32 , 20F05
Secondary: 20E28 , 20G41 , 20P05

Keywords: finite groups , generation , probabilistic methods , simple groups , spread

Rights: Copyright © 2021 Department of Mathematics, Princeton University

JOURNAL ARTICLE
69 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

Vol.193 • No. 2 • March 2021
Back to Top