The binary tetrahedral group, denoted by 2T, fits into the short exact sequence This sequence does not split, meaning that 2T is not a semidirect product of by T. In fact, there is no subgroup of 2T isomorphic to T. The binary tetrahedral group is the covering group of the tetrahedral group. Thinking of the tetrahedral group as the alternating group on four letters,, we thus have the binary tetrahedral group as the covering group, The center of 2T is the subgroup. The inner automorphism group is isomorphic to A4, and the full automorphism group is isomorphic to S4. The binary tetrahedral group can be written as a semidirect product where Q is the quaternion group consisting of the 8 Lipschitz units and C3 is the cyclic group of order 3 generated by. The group Z3 acts on the normal subgroup Q by conjugation. Conjugation by is the automorphism of Q that cyclically rotates,, and. One can show that the binary tetrahedral group is isomorphic to the special linear group SL – the group of all matrices over the finite fieldF3 with unit determinant, with this isomorphism covering the isomorphism of the projective special linear group PSL with the alternating group A4.
Presentation
The group 2T has a presentation given by or equivalently, Generators with these relations are given by With
Subgroups
The quaternion group consisting of the 8 Lipschitz units forms a normal subgroup of 2T of index 3. This group and the center are the only nontrivial normal subgroups. All other subgroups of 2T are cyclic groups generated by the various elements, with orders 3, 4, and 6.
Higher dimensions
Just as the tetrahedral group generalizes to the rotational symmetry group of the n-simplex, there is a corresponding higher binary group which is a 2-fold cover, coming from the cover Spin → SO. The rotational symmetry group of the n-simplex can be considered as the alternating group on n + 1 points, An+1, and the corresponding binary group is a 2-fold covering group. For all higher dimensions except A6 and A7, this binary group is the covering group and is superperfect, but for dimensional 5 and 6 there is an additional exceptional 3-fold cover, and the binary groups are not superperfect.
The binary tetrahedral group was used in the context of Yang–Mills theory in 1956 by Chen Ning Yang and others. It was first used in flavor physics model building by Paul Frampton and Thomas Kephart in 1994. In 2012 it was shown that a relation between two neutrino mixing angles, derived by using this binary tetrahedral flavor symmetry, agrees with experiment.