If is the automorphism group of then where the multiplication is given by Typically, a semidirect product is given in the form where and are groups and is a homomorphism and where the multiplication of elements in the semi-direct product is given as which is well defined, since and therefore. For the holomorph, and is the identity map, as such we suppress writing explicitly in the multiplication given in above. For example,
A group G acts naturally on itself by left and right multiplication, each giving rise to a homomorphism from G into the symmetric group on the underlying set of G. One homomorphism is defined as λ: G → Sym, λ = g·h. That is, g is mapped to the permutation obtained by left-multiplying each element ofG by g. Similarly, a second homomorphism ρ: G → Sym is defined by ρ = h·g−1, where the inverse ensures that ρ = ρ). These homomorphisms are called the left and right regular representations of G. Each homomorphism is injective, a fact referred to as Cayley's theorem. For example, if G = C3 = is a cyclic group of order three, then
λ = x·1 = x,
λ = x·x = x2, and
λ = x·x2 = 1,
so λ takes to. The image ofλ is a subgroup of Sym isomorphic to G, and its normalizer in Sym is defined to be the holomorphN of G. For each n in N and g in G, there is an h in G such that n·λ = λ·n. If an element n of the holomorph fixes the identity of G, then for 1 in G, =, but the left hand side is n, and the right side is h. In other words, if n in N fixes the identity of G, then for every g in G, n·λ = λ·n. If g, h are elements of G, and n is an element of N fixing the identity of G, then applying this equality twice to n·λ·λ and once to the expression n·λ gives that n·n = n. That is, every element of N that fixes the identity of G is in fact an automorphism of G. Such an n normalizes λ, and the only λ that fixes the identity is λ. Setting A to be the stabilizer of the identity, the subgroup generated by A and λ is semidirect product with normal subgroupλ and complementA. Since λ is transitive, the subgroup generated by λ and the point stabilizerA is all of N, which shows the holomorph as a permutation group is isomorphic to the holomorph as semidirect product. It is useful, but not directly relevant, that the centralizer of λ in Sym is ρ, their intersection is ρ = λ, where Z is the center of G, and that A is a common complement to both of these normal subgroups of N.
Properties
ρ ∩ Aut = 1
Aut normalizes ρ so that canonicallyρAut ≅ G ⋊ Aut