The dihedral groupDih4 has ten subgroups, counting itself and the trivial subgroup. Five of the eight group elements generate subgroups of order two, and the other two non-identity elements both generate the same cyclic subgroup of order four. In addition, there are two subgroups of the form Z2 × Z2, generated by pairs of order-two elements. The lattice formed by these ten subgroups is shown in the illustration.
This example also shows that the lattice of all subgroups of a group is not a modular lattice in general. Indeed, this particular lattice contains the forbidden "pentagon" N5 as a sublattice.
The Zassenhaus lemma gives an isomorphism between certain combinations of quotients and products in the lattice of subgroups.
As groups are algebraic structures, it follows by a general Theorem (Burris & Sankappanavar 2011, p. 33) that their lattices of subgroups are algebraic lattices. This means that they are complete and compactly generated. However in general, there is no restriction on the possible sublattices of the lattice of subgroups, in the sense that every lattice is isomorphic to a sublattice of the subgroup lattice of some group. Furthermore, every finite lattice is isomorphic to a sublattice of the subgroup lattice of some finite group (Schmidt 1994, p. 9). Every finite distributive lattice is also isomorphic to the normal subgroup lattice of some group (Silcock 1977).
Characteristic lattices
Subgroups with certain properties form lattices, but other properties do not.
Normal subgroups always form a modular lattice. In fact, the essential property that guarantees that the lattice is modular is that subgroups commute with each other, i.e. that they are quasinormal subgroups.
A class of groups is called a Fitting class if it is closed under isomorphism, subnormal subgroups, and products of subnormal subgroups. For any Fitting class F, both the subnormal F-subgroups and the normal F-subgroups form lattices. This generalizes the above with F the class of nilpotent groups, and another example is with F the class of solvable groups.
However, neither finite subgroups nor torsion subgroups form a lattice: for instance, the free product is generated by two torsion elements, but is infinite and contains elements of infinite order.
The fact that normal subgroups form a modular lattice is a particular case of a more general result, namely that in any Maltsev variety (of which groups are an example), the lattice of congruences is modular (Kearnes & Kiss 2013).
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