Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Fitting's theorem

Fitting's theorem is a mathematical theorem proved by Hans Fitting. It can be stated as follows:If M and N are nilpotent normal subgroups of a group G, then their product MN is also a nilpotent normal subgroup of G; if, moreover, M is nilpotent of class m and N is nilpotent of class n, then MN is nilpotent of class at most m + n.

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Fitting's theorem is a mathematical theorem proved by Hans Fitting.1 It can be stated as follows:

If M and N are nilpotent normal subgroups of a group G, then their product MN is also a nilpotent normal subgroup of G; if, moreover, M is nilpotent of class m and N is nilpotent of class n, then MN is nilpotent of class at most m + n.2

By induction it follows also that the subgroup generated by a finite collection of nilpotent normal subgroups is nilpotent. This can be used to show that the Fitting subgroup of certain types of groups (including all finite groups) is nilpotent. However, a subgroup generated by an infinite collection of nilpotent normal subgroups need not be nilpotent.3

References

References

  1. Fitting, Hans (1938), "Beiträge zur Theorie der Gruppen endlicher Ordnung", Jahresbericht der Deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung (in German), 48: 77–141; see Hilfsatz 10 (unnumbered in text), p. 100
  2. Clement, Anthony E.; Majewicz, Stephen; Zyman, Marcos (2017), "2.3.6 Products of Normal Nilpotent Subgroups", The theory of nilpotent groups, Cham: Birkhäuser/Springer, pp. 46–47, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-66213-8, ISBN 978-3-319-66211-4
  3. Clement, Majewicz & Zyman (2017), Lemma 7.18 and Remark 7.8, p. 297