(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | =[[HW3_MA453Fall2008walther|HW3]], Chapter 4, Problem 19, [[MA453]], Fall 2008, [[user:walther|Prof. Walther]]= | ||
+ | ==Problem Statement== | ||
+ | ''Could somebody please state the problem?'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | ==Discussion== | ||
+ | |||
Maybe I'm just making this hard on myself, or maybe I just don't properly understand the definition of cyclic subgroups. My answer just does not match up with the answer in the back of the book. Help would be appreciated. | Maybe I'm just making this hard on myself, or maybe I just don't properly understand the definition of cyclic subgroups. My answer just does not match up with the answer in the back of the book. Help would be appreciated. | ||
Line 6: | Line 13: | ||
What I'm getting is <1>, <7>, <11>, <13>, <17>, <19>, <23>, and <29>, but since <7> = <13> and <17> = <23>, the back of the book only lists one of the two. Their choice was to leave out <13> and <23>, but listing <1>, <11>, <13>, <19>, <23>, <29> would be right as well. They simply did not want to list the same subgroup twice. If this is not the issue you were having, let me know and I'll further explain the problem. | What I'm getting is <1>, <7>, <11>, <13>, <17>, <19>, <23>, and <29>, but since <7> = <13> and <17> = <23>, the back of the book only lists one of the two. Their choice was to leave out <13> and <23>, but listing <1>, <11>, <13>, <19>, <23>, <29> would be right as well. They simply did not want to list the same subgroup twice. If this is not the issue you were having, let me know and I'll further explain the problem. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | |||
+ | That is the problem I was having. Thank you! | ||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | [[HW3_MA453Fall2008walther|Back to HW3]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Main_Page_MA453Fall2008walther|Back to MA453 Fall 2008 Prof. Walther]] |
Latest revision as of 16:08, 22 October 2010
HW3, Chapter 4, Problem 19, MA453, Fall 2008, Prof. Walther
Problem Statement
Could somebody please state the problem?
Discussion
Maybe I'm just making this hard on myself, or maybe I just don't properly understand the definition of cyclic subgroups. My answer just does not match up with the answer in the back of the book. Help would be appreciated.
Thanks!
What I'm getting is <1>, <7>, <11>, <13>, <17>, <19>, <23>, and <29>, but since <7> = <13> and <17> = <23>, the back of the book only lists one of the two. Their choice was to leave out <13> and <23>, but listing <1>, <11>, <13>, <19>, <23>, <29> would be right as well. They simply did not want to list the same subgroup twice. If this is not the issue you were having, let me know and I'll further explain the problem.
That is the problem I was having. Thank you!