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inverse of a product
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(Theorem)
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Theorem 1 If $a$ and $b$ are arbitrary elements of the group $(G,\,*)$ , then the inverse of $a*b$ is
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(1) |
Proof. Let the neutral element of the group, which may be proved unique, be $e$ . Using only the group postulates we obtain $$(a*b)*(b^{-1}*a^{-1}) = a*(b*(b^{-1}*a^{-1})) = a*((b*b^{-1})*a^{-1}) = a*(e*a^{-1}) = a*a^{-1} = e,$$ $$(b^{-1}*a^{-1})*(a*b) = b^{-1}*(a^{-1}*(a*b)) = b^{-1}*((a^{-1}*a)*b) = b^{-1}*(e*b) = b^{-1}*b = e,$$ Q.E.D.
Note. The formula (1) may be by induction extended to the form $$(a_1*\cdots*a_n)^{-1} = a_n^{-1}*\cdots*a_1^{-1}.$$
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"inverse of a product" is owned by pahio.
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Cross-references: induction, postulates, neutral element, proof, inverse, group
This is version 13 of inverse of a product, born on 2004-12-13, modified 2008-05-10.
Object id is 6575, canonical name is InverseFormingInProportionToGroupOperation.
Accessed 3682 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 20-00 (Group theory and generalizations :: General reference works ) | | | 20A05 (Group theory and generalizations :: Foundations :: Axiomatics and elementary properties) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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