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Is it true that any abelian $p$-group (not necessarily finite) is the center of a $p$-group and of index $p^2$?

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    $\begingroup$ The center of a p-group cannot have index p... $\endgroup$ Sep 14, 2012 at 14:01
  • $\begingroup$ If omit "of index p". Is it true that any abelian group can be center of of some p-group ? $\endgroup$ Sep 14, 2012 at 14:06
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    $\begingroup$ I should have written index $p^2$. $\endgroup$ Sep 14, 2012 at 14:34
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    $\begingroup$ I think the answer is "yes" if you ask for index $p^2$. Let $H$ be the Heisenberg group of uni-upper-triangular matrices with entries in the finite field $\mathbb{F}_p$ with $p$ elements. Then $H$ has order $p^3$ and it is generated by $3$ elements $x,y,z$ of order $p$ subject to the relation $xy = zyx$ say. Now let $g \in A$ be any element of order $p$, and let $G := (A \times H ) / \langle (g, z^{-1}) \rangle$. Then $G$ contains $A$ as a central subgroup of index $p^2$, and $Z(G)$ cannot strictly contain $A$ since then $Z(G)$ would have index $p$. So $A = Z(G)$ has index precisely $p^2$. $\endgroup$
    – user91132
    Sep 14, 2012 at 14:55
  • $\begingroup$ This is for $p > 2$. If $p = 2$, then I guess you have to be a little more clever. $\endgroup$
    – user91132
    Sep 14, 2012 at 14:58

4 Answers 4

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Edit. In fact, any nontrivial abelian $p$-group $A$ can be realized as the center of a $p$-group with index $p^n$ except in the case $n=1$ (if $A$ is trivial, then it cannot be the center of a nontrivial $p$-group). As has been noted, if $N\subseteq Z(G)$ and $G/N$ is cyclic, then $G$ is abelian, so no group can have a center of prime index. For $n=0$, you can just take $A$ itself.

For $n\gt 1$, we can use the same trick as the one used by Konstantin Ardakov in the comments: take a group $K$ of order $p^{n+1}$ and class $n$ (such groups are called "$p$-groups of maximal class; I'll give an example below). Such a group $K$ has $Z(K)\cong \mathbf{C}_p$, cyclic of order $p$. Let $k$ be a generator of $Z(K)$. Now let $a\in A$ be an element of order $p$, and take the amalgamated direct product $G=(A\times K)/\langle (a,k^{-1})\rangle$. It is easy to verify that $Z(G)\cong A$, and $G/Z(G)\cong K/Z(K)$, and $K/Z(K)$ has ordder $p^n$.

Leedham-Green and McKay's The Structure of Groups of Prime Power Order (London Math. Soc. Monographs, new series, no. 27), has several examples of $p$-groups of maximal class in Section 3.1. Here are some: for $p=2$ you can take the dihedral, semidihedral, or generalized quaternion groups of order $2^{n+1}$. For odd prime $p$, the analogue of the dihedral group is as follows: let $K_p$ be the $p$th local cyclotomic number field, let $\mathcal{O}$ be its valuation ring, and let $\theta$ be a primitive $p$th root of unity. Let $\mathfrak{p}=(\theta-1)$ be the maximal ideal of $\mathcal{O}$. Then $\mathcal{O}$ is a $C_p$-module, with the generator acting like multiplication by $\theta$. The ideals $\mathfrak{p}^i$ are invariant under the action. We define $\mathbf{E}_{p^n} = (\mathcal{O}/\mathfrak{p}^{n-1})\rtimes \mathbf{C}_p$. This group has maximal class and order $p^{n}$.

(Other examples: $\mathbf{C}_p\wr\mathbf{C}_p$ is a $p$-group of maximal class and order $p^{p+1}$. Or let $A$ be an elementary abelian $p$-group of rank $d$, let $M\in\mathrm{GL}(d,p)$ be the matrix that has $1$s in the diagonal and right above the diagonal, and zeros elsewhere. Then $A\rtimes\langle M_d\rangle$ has maximal class if and only if $3\leq d\leq p$).


On the other hand, you may want simpler groups, say groups $G$ with $Z(G)\cong A$, $[G:Z(G)]$ of order $p^n$, and $G/Z(G)$ abelian.

An old paper of R. Baer, Groups with preassigned central and central quotient groups, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 44 (1938), no. 3, 387-412, MR1501973, available on-line here, can be used to determine which abelian $p$ groups can be embedded as the center of a group of class two with index $p^n$ for any $n\gt 1$. The paper considers the problem addressed in the title, and has both an existence and a uniqueness theorem. The existence theorem is restricted to the case in which the central quotient group is a direct sum of cyclic groups, and the uniqueness theorem is further restricted to the case in which the central quotient is finitely generated.

Some notation before stating the main existence result: given an abelian group $A$, $r(A)$ denotes minimum cardinality of a maximal linearly independent subset of $A$ (if $A$ is torsion free or of prime exponent, then any maximal linearly independent subset has $r(A)$ elements, but for more general abelian groups this need not be the case). $A_{t}$ denotes the torsion subgroup of $A$, $A[n]$ the subgroup of elements $x$ such that $nx=0$, and $A(p)$ the subgroup of elements such that $p^ix=0$ for some $i\geq 0$ ($p$ a prime, of course).

Define $r(A,0)$ to be the rank of $A/A_{t}$, and $r(A,p^i)$ to be the rank of $(p^{i-1}A(p))/(p^iA(p))$

The main result of the paper is:

Existence Theorem. If $A$ is an abelian group and $G$ is a direct sum of cyclic groups, then the following conditions are necessary and sufficient for the existence of a group whose center is $A$ and whose central quotient is isomorphic to $G$:

  1. If $G$ contains elements of order $p^i$, then $A$ contains elements of order $p^i$.
  2. If $G$ contains elements of infinite order, then $A$ contains elements of infinite order, or the orders of the elements in $G_t$ are not bounded.
  3. If the orders of the elements in $G_t$ are bounded, and $r(G,0)$ is a finite positive integer, then $A$ contains elements of infinite order and $1\lt r(G,0)$.
  4. If the orders of the elements in $G_t$ are bounded, and $r(G,0)$ is an odd positive integer, then $A$ contains two independent elements of infinite order ($r(A,0)\gt 1$).
  5. If $G=G_t$, $G(p)\neq 0$, and the orders of elements in $G(p)$ are bounded, then $G(p)$ contains at least two independent elements of maximum order.
  6. If $G=G_t$, and the orders of elements in $G(p)$ are bounded, then if $r(G,p^{i+k})$ is finite with $k\geq 0$ and $r(G,p^i)$ is odd, then $A$ contains two independent elements of order $p^i$ ($r(p^{i-1}A[p])\gt 1$).

So fix $n\gt 1$; if $A$ is an arbitrary nontrivial abelian $p$-group, then let $G$ be the direct sum of $n$ copies of the cyclic group of order $p$. Then 1 is satisfied, 2, 3, and 4 are vacuously true, and $5$ is true. (Note that condition 5 excludes the possibility of index $p$, though that can be derived directly as has been mentioned).

Now, since $G(p)=G$, and $pG=0$, for point 6, note that for any $i\gt 1$ we have $r(G,p^i)=0$; and $r(G,p)=n$; if $n$ is even, then 6 is satisfied vacuously, so you can always obtain a group. You can realize it taking an element $x$ of order $p$ in $A$, letting $G$ be the extraspecial $p$-group of order $p^{2n+1}$ with center generated by $c$, and taking the group $A\times G/\langle (x,z^{-1})\rangle$, an amalgamated direct product; same idea as the construction given by Konstantin Ardakov in the comments.

If $n$ is odd, however, then condition $6$ requires that $A$ contain at least two independent elements of order $p$.

Since a finite abelian group is capable if and only if it is not cyclic and the two largest invariants are equal, if we realize $A$ as the center of a group $B$ with $[B:A]=p^{2k+1}$, then $B$ must be a direct sum of the form $C_{p^{a_1}}\oplus\cdots\oplus C_{p^{a_r}}$ with $r\gt 1$, $a_1\leq a_2\leq\cdots\leq a_r$, and $a_{r-1}=a_r$; so any $G$ we try to use must have at least three cyclic summands, and so picking a different group $G$ to be a central quotient would only put stronger conditions on $A$ (e.g., requiring $A$ to contain at least two independent elements of order $p^i$ for several different $i$).

In summary:

Let $A$ be an abelian $p$-group, not necessarily finite, and let $n\gt 0$. Then $A$ can be realized as the center of a $p$-group $H$ of class $2$ with $[H:A]=p^n$ if and only if: (i) $A$ is trivial and $n=0$; (ii) $A$ is nontrivial and $n$ is even; or (iii) $A$ is nontrivial, $n\gt 1$ is odd, and $A$ has at least two independent elements of order $p$.

And if $n\neq 1$, then any nontrivial abelian $p$-group $A$ can be realized as the center of a group $G$ with $[G:A]=p^n$.

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  • $\begingroup$ Do you happen to know a presentation of the "dihedral group for odd primes" $\mathbf{E}_{p^n}$ ? $\endgroup$
    – tj_
    Jul 5, 2016 at 0:25
  • $\begingroup$ @tj_: Not off the top of my head, but the description should provide something relatively straightforward. Presumably it is similar to the presentation for regular dihedral groups given as $r^n=s^2=1$, $sr=r^{n-1}s$; but the order of $r$ would be $p^n$, the order of $s$ would be $p$ instead of $2$. $\endgroup$ Jul 5, 2016 at 2:07
  • $\begingroup$ Thank you. So, if I'm not missing something, it is a split metacyclic p-group. $\endgroup$
    – tj_
    Jul 5, 2016 at 4:35
  • $\begingroup$ What you call "amalgamated direct product" is often called "central product". $\endgroup$
    – YCor
    Feb 6 at 8:39
  • $\begingroup$ @YCor Not quite (or not always); $G$ is the central product of $H$ and $K$ if and only if $[H,K]=1$, $G=HK$, and $H\cap K=Z(G)$. (E.g., Leedham-Green and McKay, Structure of Groups of Prime Power Order, Definition 2.2.6). This is equivalent to an isomorphism $f\colon Z(H)\to Z(K)$ and taking $H\times K/\{(h,f(h)\mid h\in H\}$. The example does not satisfy the third condition. I think I've seen the third condition relaxed in some places, but it is because of that condition that I did not call it a central product. $\endgroup$ Feb 6 at 14:47
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If $G$ is a group with centre $Z$ such that $G/Z$ is cyclic, then necessarily $G$ is abelian. So no such group can exist.

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  • $\begingroup$ why "then necessarily ... " ? $\endgroup$ Sep 14, 2012 at 14:07
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    $\begingroup$ Let $g \in G$ be any element whose image in $G/Z$ generates $G/Z$. Then every element of $G$ is of the form $g^iz$ for some integer $i$ and $z \in Z$. But any two such elements commute. This is an elaborate version of Charles' succinct answer. $\endgroup$
    – user91132
    Sep 14, 2012 at 14:12
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The center of a group cannot be of prime index, because a non-central element must fail to commute with something, which therefore cannot be one of its powers.

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  • $\begingroup$ if a^k \in Z, does it imply a \in Z ? $\endgroup$ Sep 14, 2012 at 14:04
  • $\begingroup$ No. Consider any non-abelian group of order $8$. $\endgroup$
    – user91132
    Sep 14, 2012 at 14:05
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Another example. Let $Z$ be an abelian $p$-group and let $Z=C\times Z_1$, where $C>\{1\}$ is cyclic. There is a $p$-group $H$ such that $\text{Z}(H)\cong C$ and $|H:C|=p^2$. Indeed, let $H$ be a $p$-group with cyclic subgroup of index $p$ and of order $p^2|C|$ and $\text{cl}(H)=2$ (such $H$ exists as follows from the classification of nonabelian $p$-groups with cyclic subgroup of index $p$). Then $G=H\times Z_1$ satisfies conditions 1-3.

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