Hall's universal group

In algebra, Hall's universal group is a countable locally finite group, say U, which is uniquely characterized by the following properties.

It was defined by Philip Hall in 1959,[1] and has the universal property that all countable locally finite groups embed into it.

Hall's universal group is the Fraïssé limit of the class of all finite groups.

Construction edit

Take any group   of order  . Denote by   the group   of permutations of elements of  , by   the group

 

and so on. Since a group acts faithfully on itself by permutations

 

according to Cayley's theorem, this gives a chain of monomorphisms

 

A direct limit (that is, a union) of all   is Hall's universal group U.

Indeed, U then contains a symmetric group of arbitrarily large order, and any group admits a monomorphism to a group of permutations, as explained above. Let G be a finite group admitting two embeddings to U. Since U is a direct limit and G is finite, the images of these two embeddings belong to  . The group   acts on   by permutations, and conjugates all possible embeddings  .[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hall, P. Some constructions for locally finite groups. J. London Math. Soc. 34 (1959) 305--319. MR162845