Math 360, Fall 2013, Assignment 11

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The moving power of mathematical invention is not reasoning but the imagination.

- Augustus de Morgan

Carefully define the following terms, then give one example and one non-example of each:

  1. Action (of a group $G$ on a set $X$).
  2. $G$-set.
  3. Homomorphism (of $G$-sets).
  4. Isomorphism (of $G$-sets).
  5. Orbit (in a $G$-set).
  6. Transitive action.
  7. Isotropy group (of a point in a $G$-set).
  8. Ring.
  9. Homomorphism (of rings).
  10. Unity.
  11. Unit (warning: this is not a synonym for "unity").
  12. Division ring.
  13. Field.
  14. Subring.
  15. Subfield.

Carefully state the following theorems (you need not prove them):

  1. Classification of transitive actions (we stated this in class; in the book it appears only as Exercise 16.15).

Solve the following problems:

  1. Section 16, problems 2, 3, and 9.
  2. Section 18, problems 3, 5, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, and 17.