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All primes are cyclic numbers.
There are, however, non-prime cyclic numbers as well.
The smallest non-cyclic number is .
However, as is the square of the prime , it is an Abelian number.
An example of an Abelian number that is not the square of a prime is .
The smallest non-Nilpotent number is (the symmetric group of degree is not nilpotent).
However, is a metacyclic number.
Nilpotent numbers need not be cube-free.
The smallest non-metacyclic number is , since the elementary group of order is not metacyclic.
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The smallest non-Lagrangian number is ; the alternating group on four letters has no subgroup of order .
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It is also the smallest non-supersoluble number.
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(In fact, a finite group is supersoluble if, and only if, each of its subgroups is Lagrangian.)
Every Lagrangian number is a GCLT number, but not conversely.
Not every Lagrangian number is an ordered Sylow tower number. The smallest example is .
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Conversely, not every ordered Sylow tower number is a Lagrangian number. All three groups of order have an ordered Sylow tower (one of complexion [5, 3]), but the non-abelian group of order is not Lagrangian; it has no subgroup of order .
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This is the smallest example:
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The number is not a soluble number since there is a non-Abelian simple group (the alternating group of degree ) of that order.
However, is the smallest number that is not a soluble number.
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Because of the existence of a non-abelian simple group of that order, the number is a simple number.
There are, in fact, two simple groups of order , so is a simple number. (It is the smallest number for which there are two simple groups of that order.)
There are no simple groups of order , so is not a simple number.
By default, the IsSimpleNumber command only returns true for non-prime numbers.
To include the Abelian simple groups, use the cyclic option.
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