- #1
astronut24
- 10
- 0
if G is a group of order 2n then show that it has an element of order 2 ( and odd number of them)
i've been thinking about this...and i think I've gotten somewhere...
e belongs to G and o(e) = 1
now if there's no element of order 2 in G...we're looking at elements which are not their own inverses...such elements come in pairs, so i guess there lies the contradiction...
i don't have a clue as to how to show that there are odd number of elements of order two.
i've been thinking about this...and i think I've gotten somewhere...
e belongs to G and o(e) = 1
now if there's no element of order 2 in G...we're looking at elements which are not their own inverses...such elements come in pairs, so i guess there lies the contradiction...
i don't have a clue as to how to show that there are odd number of elements of order two.