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8 votes
4 answers
659 views

Normal Covering of a Finite Group

Suppose $G$ is a finite group and $N_1, N_2, \cdots, N_k$ are proper normal subgroups of $G$. The set $\{ N_1, \cdots, N_k\}$ is called a normal cover for $G$, if $G = \cup_{i=1}^kN_i$. I need to the ...
Fatemeh Moftakhar's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
958 views

Groups whose normal subgroups form a chain with respect to inclusion

Let G be a finite group. In general, given two normal subgroups N and K of G, we need not have N < K or K < N. The easiest example is the Klein 4-group V4 and its subgroups of order 2. So assume ...
Amin's user avatar
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