Finitely generated abelian group
In abstract algebra, an abelian group (G,+) is called finitely generated if there exists finitely many elements x1,...,xs in G such that every x in G can be written in the from- x = n1x1 + n2x2 + ... + nsxs
Clearly, every finite abelian group is finitely generated. The finitely generated abelian groups are of a rather simple structure and can be completely classified, as will be explained below.
Examples
- the integers (Z,+) are a finitely generated abelian group
- the integers modulo n Zn are a finitely generated abelian group
- any direct sum of finitely many finitely generated abelian groups is again finitely generated abelian
Properties and Classification
Every finitely generated abelian group G is isomorphic to a direct product of the form
- (Z)n × Zm1 × ... × Zmt
Because of the general fact that Zm is isomorphic to the direct product of Zj and Zk if and only if j and k are coprime and m = jk, we can also write any abelian group G as a direct product of the form
- (Z)n × Zk1 × ... × Zku
Every subgroup and factor group of a finitely generated abelian group is again finitely generated abelian. The finitely generated abelian groups, together with the group homomorphisms, form an abelian category.
Every finitely generated abelian group has finite rank equal to the number n from above. Expressing the theorem in general terms, it says a finitely-generated abelian group is the sum of a free abelian group and a finite abelian group, each of those being unique up to isomorphism. The rank is an isomorphism invariant.
The converse is not true however: there are many abelian groups of finite rank which are not finitely generated; the rank-1 group Q is one example, and the rank-0 group given by a direct sum of countably many copies of Z2 is another one.
