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arxiv: 2605.21025 · v1 · pith:OLZPBQ7Ynew · submitted 2026-05-20 · 🧮 math.GR

Termination of the Lattice-Automorphism Tower for Direct Products of Symmetric Groups

Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 01:38 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.GR
keywords lattice of normal subgroupslattice automorphismssymmetric groupsdirect productstower groupsGoursat lemmaKrull-Schmidt theoremtermination of towers
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The pith

For groups that are direct products of symmetric groups S_k with k at least 3, the sequence of lattice automorphism groups reaches the trivial group after three steps.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that when G is a tower group, meaning a finite direct product of symmetric groups S_k for k greater than or equal to 3, the LatAut tower defined by repeated application of the automorphism group of the normal subgroup lattice terminates with the trivial group at the third step. This bound is shown to be sharp, meaning that for some such groups the tower does not terminate earlier. A supporting product formula gives an explicit description of LatAut of such a product as another product involving symmetric groups on the multiplicities. These results rely on classifying the normal subgroups using Goursat's lemma and identifying direct factors via the Krull-Schmidt theorem. The findings are specific to this family of groups and do not hold more generally.

Core claim

Let G be a tower group, so G is isomorphic to the direct product over k at least 3 of S_k raised to a_k. Then LatAut of the product is isomorphic to S_{a_4} times S_B where B is the sum of a_k for k not equal to 4. Consequently the LatAut tower satisfies G_3 equals the trivial group, and there exist tower groups where G_2 is nontrivial so the bound is sharp.

What carries the argument

The LatAut tower, which is the iterated automorphism group of the lattice of normal subgroups, together with the product formula that reduces the computation to symmetric groups on the exponents a_k.

Load-bearing premise

The group must be isomorphic to a finite direct product of symmetric groups S_k with k at least 3.

What would settle it

A specific tower group such as S_3 times S_3 where the third iterate of LatAut is not the trivial group would refute the termination claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.21025 by Sonukumar, Vinay Madhusudanan.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: The lattice N (C 2 2 ): five elements arranged as a diamond, with three atoms (middle level) permuted by LatAut(C 2 2 ) ∼= S3. Since N (S3) = {1, A3, S3} is a chain of length 2, its only automorphism is the identity, giving G3 = Aut N (S3)  = 1. The full tower is therefore S 2 4 × S 2 3 Aut(N (·)) −−−−−−→ C 2 2 Aut(N (·)) −−−−−−→ S3 Aut(N (·)) −−−−−−→ 1, terminating at step 3 with G2 = S3 ̸= 1, confirming… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Let $G$ be a finite group. Let $\mathcal{N}(G)$ be the lattice of normal subgroups ordered by inclusion, regarded as an abstract lattice. Define $\operatorname{LatAut}(G) := \operatorname{Aut}(\mathcal{N}(G))$. The \emph{LatAut tower} is the sequence defined by $G_0 = G$, $G_{n+1} = \operatorname{LatAut}(G_n)$. Let $G$ be a \emph{tower group} if $G \cong \prod_{k \geq 3} S_k^{a_k}$ with finitely many $a_k \neq 0$. We establish the following for tower groups. \emph{Product Formula.} $\operatorname{LatAut}\!\bigl(\prod_{k \geq 3} S_k^{a_k}\bigr) \cong S_{a_4} \times S_B$, where $B = \sum_{k \geq 3,\, k \neq 4} a_k$. \emph{Termination Theorem.} For every tower group $G_0$, we prove that $G_3 = 1$, and that this bound is sharp. The proof applies Goursat's lemma to classify $\mathcal{N}(G)$ into three families parameterised by admissible triples $(J,\mathbf{P},H)$ as sub-products, sign-parity elements, and mixed elements, and uses the Krull--Schmidt theorem to identify the direct factors $S_k^{(k,i)}$ as precisely the nontrivial indecomposable complemented elements of $\mathcal{N}(G)$ (the complemented elements being exactly the full sub-products). These results do not extend to groups outside the tower-group family.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper defines the lattice automorphism tower for a finite group G by G_0 = G and G_{n+1} = LatAut(G_n), where LatAut(G) is the automorphism group of the lattice of normal subgroups of G. It restricts attention to tower groups, i.e., finite direct products ∏_{k≥3} S_k^{a_k}. The central results are the Product Formula, which asserts LatAut(∏ S_k^{a_k}) ≅ S_{a_4} × S_B with B = ∑_{k≠4} a_k, and the Termination Theorem, which states that G_3 is trivial for every such G_0 and that the bound of three steps is sharp. The proofs proceed by applying Goursat's lemma to partition N(G) into three families of admissible triples (J, P, H), identifying the complemented elements as full sub-products, and invoking Krull-Schmidt to isolate the indecomposable factors S_k^{(k,i)}; iteration of the Product Formula then reduces the relevant parameters until the lattice automorphism group becomes trivial.

Significance. If the results hold, the manuscript supplies an explicit, computable description of lattice automorphisms for an infinite family of groups that includes all non-abelian simple groups of the form S_k (k≥3) and their direct products. The termination bound of three steps, together with the sharpness examples constructed by taking a_4 and B sufficiently large, gives a concrete illustration of how the lattice automorphism tower behaves under direct products. The reliance on Goursat's lemma and Krull-Schmidt is standard yet applied here in a way that yields a parameter-reduction argument; the explicit Product Formula is a strength that may serve as a model for similar computations in other classes of groups.

major comments (2)
  1. The Product Formula is the load-bearing step for both the explicit description and the termination argument. The manuscript should verify that the three families of admissible triples (J, P, H) obtained via Goursat's lemma are exhaustive and that the only complemented elements are indeed the full sub-products; a short explicit check for the case of two distinct factors S_3 × S_5 would strengthen the claim.
  2. In the iteration step of the Termination Theorem, the reduction of parameters (a_4 and B) is asserted to force triviality by the third iterate. The manuscript should include a short table or diagram tracking the multiplicity vector through the three steps for a generic choice with a_4 ≥ 1 and at least one other a_k ≥ 1, confirming that the exceptional cases S_2 and the trivial group are handled uniformly.
minor comments (2)
  1. The notation S_k^{(k,i)} for the indecomposable factors is introduced without an explicit reference to the Krull-Schmidt decomposition; a sentence clarifying that these are the unique (up to isomorphism) indecomposable summands would improve readability.
  2. The abstract states that the results do not extend outside the tower-group family, but the introduction could briefly indicate the smallest counter-example outside the family (e.g., a direct product involving S_2) to make the boundary of the result concrete.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive suggestions. We address each major comment below and will incorporate the recommended clarifications in the revised manuscript.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The Product Formula is the load-bearing step for both the explicit description and the termination argument. The manuscript should verify that the three families of admissible triples (J, P, H) obtained via Goursat's lemma are exhaustive and that the only complemented elements are indeed the full sub-products; a short explicit check for the case of two distinct factors S_3 × S_5 would strengthen the claim.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit verification for the small case S_3 × S_5 would strengthen the argument. In the revised manuscript we will add a short subsection applying Goursat's lemma directly to this example, confirming that the three families of admissible triples are exhaustive and that the complemented elements of N(G) are precisely the full sub-products. revision: yes

  2. Referee: In the iteration step of the Termination Theorem, the reduction of parameters (a_4 and B) is asserted to force triviality by the third iterate. The manuscript should include a short table or diagram tracking the multiplicity vector through the three steps for a generic choice with a_4 ≥ 1 and at least one other a_k ≥ 1, confirming that the exceptional cases S_2 and the trivial group are handled uniformly.

    Authors: We accept the suggestion to improve the clarity of the iteration argument. The revised manuscript will contain a short table tracking the multiplicity parameters a_4 and B through each of the three steps for a representative tower group with a_4 ≥ 1 and at least one other a_k ≥ 1. The table will also note the uniform handling of the cases that produce S_2 or the trivial group. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation uses external theorems

full rationale

The derivation begins by applying Goursat's lemma to classify N(G) for tower groups into admissible triples, then invokes the external Krull-Schmidt theorem to isolate indecomposable complemented elements as the individual S_k factors. The Product Formula is thereby obtained as LatAut(G) ≅ S_{a4} × S_B. Iteration of this formula on the output (itself a tower group or small exceptional case) reduces the multiplicity parameters a4 and B at each step, yielding G3 = 1. All load-bearing steps rest on these standard external lemmas rather than self-definitions, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or self-citation chains; the argument is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claims rest on two standard group-theoretic tools whose application to this concrete family constitutes the paper's contribution; no free parameters or new postulated entities are introduced.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Goursat's lemma
    Invoked to classify N(G) into three families parameterized by admissible triples (J, P, H).
  • standard math Krull-Schmidt theorem
    Used to identify the direct factors S_k^{(k,i)} as the nontrivial indecomposable complemented elements of N(G).

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5855 in / 1391 out tokens · 56178 ms · 2026-05-21T01:38:23.809922+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

8 extracted references · 8 canonical work pages

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