Abelain Group
Z(p∞) = { z ∈ ℂ | zpk = 1 for some integer k ≥ 1 }
Proof that Z(p∞) is an Abelian Group
We define the set:
Z(p∞) = { z ∈ ℂ | zpk = 1 for some integer k ≥ 1 }
We will verify the group axioms under multiplication.
1. Closure
If z1, z2 ∈ Z(p∞), then there exist integers k1, k2 such that:
z1pk1 = 1 and z2pk2 = 1.
Let k = max(k1, k2), then pk is a multiple of both pk1 and pk2. Thus,
(z1 z2)pk = z1pk z2pk = 1,
so z1 z2 ∈ Z(p∞).
2. Associativity
Multiplication in ℂ is associative, so for any z1, z2, z3 ∈ Z(p∞),
(z1 z2) z3 = z1 (z2 z3).
3. Identity Element
The number 1 is a root of unity since 1pk = 1 for all k. Thus, 1 ∈ Z(p∞).
4. Inverses
For any z ∈ Z(p∞), there exists some k such that zpk = 1.
The inverse of z is z-1, which satisfies:
(z-1)pk = (zpk)-1 = 1.
Thus, z-1 ∈ Z(p∞).
5. Commutativity
Since multiplication in ℂ is commutative,
z1 z2 = z2 z1 for all z1, z2 ∈ Z(p∞).
Conclusion
Since Z(p∞) satisfies closure, associativity, identity, inverses, and commutativity, it forms an abelian group under multiplication.
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