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Homework Statement
this is taken from herstein topics in algebra book.
G is a finite group such that n divides o(G) define the set H={x/ x^n=e} (is not always a group), prove that the number of elements in H is a multiple of n.
o(G) is the number of elements in G
Homework Equations
uhmm not sure what to put here, maybe class equation? o(G)=sum over a in diferent conjugacy classes o(G)/N(a)
where x belongs to N(a) iff ax=xa.
The Attempt at a Solution
the problem before this is about the special case G abelian and is much easier, if G abelian then H subgroup of G, Sylow theorem says that there exist a subgroup of order p^k where p^k is a divisor of n, this subgroup is then contained in H and lagrange theorem says p^k divides
o(H), this for all primes and n divides o(H).
as for the general problem this is what I've achieved, if p is prime and divides n then p divides
o(H), just note that H is closed under conjugacy, and break up H in conjugacy classes relative to (a) where a is an element of order p (existence is due to cauchy theorem);
the same ideas used in the class equation gives o(H)=o(N(a) interseccion H) mod p;
if N(a)=G, then i can break up H diferently by right translation over (a), using the fact that if x conmutes with a then
(xa)^n=x^n*a^n, so that H is closed under right translation by a, the same as in lagrange theorem o(H) is multiple of p.
if N(a) is not G then I can use induction over the size of G to finish the proof.
well that's all, sorry for not explaining more carefully what i did but the post would be longer, and i will just mention that I managed to prove
o({x/x^p=a}) where a in G is some fixed element whose order is a multiple of p, is divisible by p.
This exercise seems just to hard for me, any help is apreciated.
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