Problem statement: I need to find out if $\mathrm{Aut}(D_4)$ is isomorphic to $D_4$ and explain my answer. I already know that it is isomorphic, so now all I need to do is to prove it.
I assume that first we need to look where it sends $s$ and $t$ and it must send them to elements that satisfy the same relations() And then need to show that those two are conjugation by some element in $D_4$(?)
Any help is appreciated. I was hoping for a duplicate post, but couldn't find it.
Thank you!
The shortest proof I can think of:
Since an automorphism sends a generator to a generator, and is completely determined by its image on generators, we have, at most, $10$ automorphisms $\phi \in \text{Aut}(D_4)$ since we have $2$ choices for $\phi(r)$, and $5$ choices for $\phi(s)$ (automorphisms are order-preserving).
However, since $\text{Inn}(D_4) \leq \text{Aut}(D_4)$ has order $4$ (being isomorphic to $D_4/Z(D_4)$), we see that $|\text{Aut}(D_4)| = 4$, or $8$.
Define $\rho: D_4 \to D_4$, by $\rho(r) = r, \rho(s) = sr$. Then $\rho$ is outer, as all inner automorphisms have order $2$, and $\rho$ has order $4$. One should prove that $\rho$ is indeed an automorphism (surjectivity is the main concern), but I will omit this (it should not be hard to see $\{r,rs\}$ generate $D_4$). Thus $\text{Aut}(D_4)$ has order $8$.
Let $\sigma$ be the inner automorphism induced by $s$. Note $\rho^2(r) = r$, while $\sigma(r) = r^3$, so $\langle \rho\rangle \cap \langle \sigma\rangle = 1_{D_4}$. Thus $\langle\rho\rangle\langle \sigma\rangle = \text{Aut}(D_4)$, so that $\text{Aut}(D_4) = \langle \rho,\sigma\rangle$.
Finally, note that $\rho\sigma(r) = \rho(r) = r = \sigma(r^3) = \sigma\rho^3(r)$ and:
$\rho\sigma(s) = \rho(s) = sr = \sigma(sr^3) = \sigma\rho^3(s)$, so that $\rho\sigma = \sigma\rho^3$, and:
$r \mapsto \rho, s \mapsto \sigma$ is the desired isomomorphism $D_4 \to \text{Aut}(D_4)$.
Note the two maps (of the possible $10$ above) which fail to yield automorphisms are those that send $s \mapsto r^2$, because they are not surjective.