Chapter 12: Algebraic Structures (Set-1)

Which property means “a*b is in G” for all a,b in G

A Identity
B Closure
C Inverse
D Commutative

A binary operation on a set must map

A S×S → S
B S → S×S
C S×S → ℤ
D ℤ → S

Associativity in a group requires

A ab = ba
B ae = a
C (ab)c = a(bc)
D aa⁻¹ = e

Identity element e satisfies

A ae = e
B ae = ea = a
C ea = e
D aea = e

Inverse of a in group means

A aa⁻¹ = a
B aa⁻¹ = e only
C a⁻¹a = a only
D aa⁻¹ = a⁻¹a = e

An abelian group means

A (ab)c = a(bc)
B a⁻¹ exists
C ab = ba
D identity absent

In a group, identity element is

A Multiple always
B Unique
C Optional
D Same as inverse

Inverse of an element in a group is

A Two for each
B Not needed
C Same for all
D Unique

A subgroup must be

A Any subset
B Only proper subset
C Nonempty subset
D Only infinite subset

Subgroup test often checks

A closure and inverses
B commutativity only
C distributivity only
D ordering property

The trivial subgroup of G is

A G only
B {e}
C {0,1}
D empty set

A proper subgroup is

A H = G only
B H = empty set
C H ≠ G and H ⊂ G
D H has no identity

Order of a finite group means

A largest element value
B identity element
C number of subgroups
D number of elements

Order of an element a is

A largest n with aⁿ = e
B least n with aⁿ = e
C n where aⁿ = a
D n where a = e

A cyclic group is generated by

A one element
B two identities
C one element
D all elements together

In cyclic group ⟨g⟩, elements look like

A g+n
B gⁿ
C g/n
D n/g

A group of prime order p is

A cyclic
B never cyclic
C always nonabelian
D has no subgroups

Left coset of H by g is

A Hg
B H∪g
C gH
D H−g

Right coset of H by g is

A gH
B Hg
C g+H
D H/g

Cosets of a subgroup in a finite group have

A random sizes
B size 1 always
C size equals index
D equal size

Index [G:H] means

A number of cosets
B size of H
C number of cosets
D size of G only

Lagrange’s theorem states that for finite G

A |G| divides |H|
B |H| divides |G|
C |H| = |G|
D |H| is prime

A key consequence of Lagrange’s theorem is

A order of element divides |G|
B every group is cyclic
C every subgroup is normal
D all groups are abelian

If |G| = 12, possible element order is

A 5
B 7
C 6
D 11

If element a has order n, then aⁿ equals

A inverse of a
B identity
C a itself
D zero element

A normal subgroup N satisfies

A gN ≠ Ng always
B N has prime order
C N contains no identity
D gN = Ng for all g

Equivalent normality test is

A gN = N only
B Ng = N only
C gNg⁻¹ = N
D g²N = N

In an abelian group, every subgroup is

A cyclic
B normal
C of prime order
D trivial

Quotient group G/N uses elements as

A pairs (g,n)
B only generators
C elements of N only
D cosets of N

Coset multiplication in G/N is

A (gN)(hN) = (g+h)N
B (gN)(hN) = gh
C (gN)(hN) = (gh)N
D (gN)(hN) = N

The center Z(G) is the set of elements that

A generate whole group
B commute with all
C have prime order
D form only cosets

A homomorphism φ: G→H must satisfy

A φ(ab)=φ(a)φ(b)
B φ(a+b)=φ(a)−φ(b)
C φ(ab)=φ(a)+φ(b)
D φ(a)=a always

The kernel of homomorphism φ is

A {h : φ(h)=e}
B image of φ
C inverse set only
D {g : φ(g)=e}

The image of φ is

A kernel of φ
B subgroup of G only
C φ(G) subset of H
D set of cosets

A homomorphism is injective iff

A image is {e}
B kernel is {e}
C kernel equals G
D image equals G

First isomorphism theorem states

A kerφ ≅ imφ
B G ≅ kerφ
C H/kerφ ≅ G
D G/kerφ ≅ imφ

Composition of homomorphisms is

A never a homomorphism
B only bijective
C a homomorphism
D only for rings

An isomorphism is a homomorphism that is

A only surjective
B bijective
C only injective
D never injective

An endomorphism is a homomorphism

A from G to G
B from G to H only
C from H to G only
D from cosets to G

An automorphism is

A non-bijective map
B map to different group
C bijective endomorphism
D only kernel map

A ring requires under addition

A semigroup only
B no identity
C no inverses
D abelian group

A ring with unity means

A has additive identity only
B has multiplicative identity
C multiplication commutative always
D no zero element

Zero divisors in a ring are nonzero a,b with

A a+b = 0
B a = b
C ab = 0
D a² = a

An ideal I of ring R satisfies

A rI ⊆ I and Ir ⊆ I
B only addition closure
C only multiplication closure
D contains only units

Principal ideal in ℤ generated by n is

A ℤ/n
B nℤ
C ℤ×n
D {n} only

Quotient ring R/I elements are

A only elements of I
B only units
C cosets a+I
D ordered pairs

An integral domain is a commutative ring with unity and

A no identity element
B multiplication nonassociative
C always finite
D no zero divisors

ℤ₆ is not an integral domain because

A it has no zero
B it has zero divisors
C it has no addition
D it is infinite

A field is a commutative ring with unity where

A zero has inverse
B no addition inverses
C every nonzero has inverse
D multiplication not closed

ℤₚ forms a field when p is

A prime
B composite
C even only
D multiple of 3

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