» This article is about the abstract algebraic structures. For other meanings, see Symmetry group (disambiguation).
The
symmetry group of an object (
image,
signal, etc., for example in 1D, 2D or 3D) is the
group of all
isometries under which it's
invariant with
composition as the operation. It is a
subgroup of the
isometry group of the space concerned.
Introduction
(If not stated otherwise, we consider symmetry groups in
Euclidean geometry here, but the concept may also be studied in wider contexts, see below.)
The "objects" may be geometric figures, images and patterns, such as a
wallpaper pattern. The definition can be made more precise by specifying what is meant by image or pattern, for example a function of position with values in a set of colors. For symmetry of for example 3D bodies one may also want to take physical composition into account. The group of isometries of space induces a
group action on objects in it.
The symmetry group is sometimes also called
full symmetry group in order to emphasize that it includes the orientation-reversing isometries (like reflections,
glide reflections and
improper rotations) under which the figure is invariant. The
subgroup of orientation-preserving isometries (for example translations, rotations and compositions of these) which leave the figure invariant is called its
proper symmetry group. The proper symmetry group of an object is equal to its full symmetry group
if and only if the object is
chiral (and thus there are no
orientation-reversing isometries under which it's invariant).
Any symmetry group whose elements have a common
fixed point, which is true for all finite symmetry groups and also for the symmetry groups of bounded figures, can be represented as a
subgroup of
orthogonal group O(n) by choosing the origin to be a fixed point. The proper symmetry group is a subgroup of the special orthogonal group SO(n) then, and therefore also called
rotation group of the figure.
Discrete symmetry groups come in three types: (1) finite
point groups, which include only rotations, reflections, inversion and rotoinversion - they're in fact just the finite subgroups of O(n), (2) infinite
lattice groups, which include only translations, and (3) infinite
space groups which combines elements of both previous types, and may also include extra transformations like
screw axis and
glide reflection. There are also
continuous symmetry groups, which contain rotations of arbitrarily small angles or translations of arbitrarily small distances. The group of all symmetries of a sphere
O(3) is an example of this, and in general such
continuous symmetry groups are studied as
Lie groups. With a
categorization of subgroups of the Euclidean group corresponds a categorization of symmetry groups.
Two geometric figures are considered to be of the same symmetry type if their symmetry groups are conjugate subgroups of the
Euclidean group E(
n) (the isometry group of R
n), where two subgroups
H1,
H2 of a group
G are
conjugate, if there exists
g ∈
G such that
H1=g
-1H2g. For example:
- two 3D figures have mirror symmetry, but with respect to a different mirror plane
- two 3D figures have 3-fold rotational symmetry, but with respect to a different axis
- two 2D patterns have translational symmetry, each in one direction; the two translation vectors have the same length but a different direction
Sometimes a broader concept of "same symmetry type" is used, resulting in for example 17 wallpaper groups.
When considering isometry groups, one may restrict oneself to those where for all points the set of images under the isometries is
topologically closed. This excludes for example in 1D the group of translations by a rational number. A "figure" with this symmetry group is non-drawable and up to arbitrarily fine detail homogeneous, without being really homogeneous.
One dimension
The isometry groups in 1D where for all points the set of images under the isometries is
topologically closed are:
the trivial group C1
the groups of two elements generated by a reflection in a point; they're isomorphic with C2
the infinite discrete groups generated by a translation; they're isomorphic with Z
the infinite discrete groups generated by a translation and a reflection in a point; they're isomorphic with the generalized dihedral group of Z, Dih(Z), also denoted by D∞ (which is a semidirect product of Z and C2).
the group generated by all translations (isomorphic with R); this group can't be the symmetry group of a "pattern": it would be homogeneous, hence could also be reflected. However, a uniform 1D vector field has this symmetry group.
the group generated by all translations and reflections in points; they're isomorphic with the generalized dihedral group of R, Dih(R).
See also symmetry groups in one dimension.
Two dimensions
Up to conjugacy the discrete point groups in 2 dimensional space are the following classes:
cyclic groups C1, C2, C3, C4,... where Cn consists of all rotations about a fixed point by multiples of the angle 360°/n
dihedral groups D1, D2, D3, D4,... where Dn (of order 2n) consists of the rotations in Cn together with reflections in n axes that pass through the fixed point.
C1 is the trivial group containing only the identity operation, which occurs when the figure has no symmetry at all, for example the letter F. C2 is the symmetry group of the letter Z, C3 that of a triskelion, C4 of a swastika, and C5, C6 etc. are the symmetry groups of similar swastika-like figures with five, six etc. arms instead of four.
D1 is the 2-element group containing the identity operation and a single reflection, which occurs when the figure has only a single axis of bilateral symmetry, for example the letter A. D2, which is isomorphic to the Klein four-group, is the symmetry group of a non-equilateral rectangle, and D3, D4 etc. are the symmetry groups of the regular polygons.
The actual symmetry groups in each of these cases have two degrees of freedom for the center of rotation, and in the case of the dihedral groups, one more for the positions of the mirrors.
The remaining isometry groups in 2D with a fixed point, where for all points the set of images under the isometries is topologically closed are:
the special orthogonal group SO(2) consisting of all rotations about a fixed point; it's also called the circle group S1, the multiplicative group of complex numbers of absolute value 1. It is the proper symmetry group of a circle and the continuous equivalent of Cn. There is no figure which has as full symmetry group the circle group, but for a vector field it may apply (see the 3D case below).
the orthogonal group O(2) consisting of all rotations about a fixed point and reflections in any axis through that fixed point. This is the symmetry group of a circle. It is also called Dih(S1) as it's the generalized dihedral group of S1.
For non-bounded figures, the additional isometry groups can include translations; the closed ones are:
the 7 frieze groups
the 17 wallpaper groups
for each of the symmetry groups in 1D, the combination of all symmetries in that group in one direction, and the group of all translations in the perpendicular direction
ditto with also reflections in a line in the first direction
Three dimensions
Up to conjugacy the set of 3D point groups consists of 7 infinite series, and 7 separate ones. In crystallography they're restricted to be compatible with the discrete translation symmetries of a crystal lattice. This crystallographic restriction of the infinite families of general point groups results in 32 crystallographic point groups (27 from the 7 infinite series, and 5 of the 7 others).
See point groups in three dimensions.
The continuous symmetry groups with a fixed point include those of:
cylindrical symmetry without a symmetry plane perpendicular to the axis, this applies for example often for a bottle
cylindrical symmetry with a symmetry plane perpendicular to the axis
spherical symmetry
For objects and scalar fields the cylindrical symmetry implies vertical planes of reflection. However, for vector fields it does not: in cylindrical coordinates with respect to some axis,
has cylindrical symmetry with respect to the axis if and only if and have this symmetry, for example, they don't depend on φ. Additionally there's reflectional symmetry if and only if .
For spherical symmetry there's no such distinction, it implies planes of reflection.
The continuous symmetry groups without a fixed point include those with a screw axis, such as an infinite helix. See also subgroups of the Euclidean group.
Symmetry groups in general
In wider contexts, a symmetry group may be any kind of transformation group, or automorphism group. Once we know what kind of mathematical structure we're concerned with, we should be able to pinpoint what mappings preserve the structure. Conversely, specifying the symmetry can define the structure, or at least clarify what we mean by an invariant, geometric language in which to discuss it; this is one way of looking at the Erlangen programme.
For example, automorphism groups of certain models of finite geometries are not "symmetry groups" in the usual sense, although they preserve symmetry. They do this by preserving families of point-sets rather than point-sets (or "objects") themselves.
Like above, the group of automorphisms of space induces a group action on objects in it.
For a given geometric figure in a given geometric space, consider the following equivalence relation: two automorphisms of space are equivalent if and only if the two images of the figure are the same (here "the same" doesn't mean something like for example "the same up to translation and rotation", but it means "exactly the same"). Then the equivalence class of the identity is the symmetry group of the figure, and every equivalence class corresponds to one isomorphic version of the figure.
There is a bijection between every pair of equivalence classes: the inverse of a representative of the first equivalence class, composed with a representative of the second.
In the case of a finite automorphism group of the whole space, its order is the order of the symmetry group of the figure multiplied by the number of isomorphic versions of the figure.
Examples:
Isometries of the Euclidean plane, the figure is a rectangle: there are infinitely many equivalence classes; each contains 4 isometries.
The space is a cube with Euclidean metric; the figures include cubes of the same size as the space, with colors or patterns on the faces; the automorphisms of the space are the 48 isometries; the figure is a cube of which one face has a different color; the figure has a symmetry group of 8 isometries, there are 6 equivalence classes of 8 isometries, for 6 isomorphic versions of the figure.
Compare Lagrange's theorem (group theory) and its proof.
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