- Eisenstein integer
In
mathematics , Eisenstein integers, named afterFerdinand Eisenstein , arecomplex number s of the form:
where "a" and "b" are
integer s and:
is a complex
cube root of unity . The Eisenstein integers form atriangular lattice in thecomplex plane . Contrast with theGaussian integers which form a square lattice in the complex plane.Properties
The Eisenstein integers form a
commutative ring ofalgebraic integer s in thealgebraic number field Q(ω). To see that the Eisenstein integers are algebraic integers note that each "z" = "a" + "b"ω is a root of themonic polynomial :In particular, ω satisfies the equation:The norm of a Eisenstein integer is just the square of its
absolute value and is given by:Thus the norm of an Eisenstein integer is always an ordinary (rational) integer. Since: the norm of a nonzero Eisenstein integer is positive.The
group of units in the ring of Eisenstein integers is thecyclic group formed by the sixthroots of unity in the complex plane. Specifically, they are:{±1, ±ω, ±ω2}These are just the Eisenstein integers of norm one.Eisenstein primes
If "x" and "y" are Eisenstein integers, we say that "x" "divides" "y" if there is some Eisenstein integer "z" such that "y" = "z" "x".
This extends the notion of divisibility for ordinary
integer s. Therefore we may also extend the notion ofprimality ; a non-unit Eisenstein integer "x" is said to be anEisenstein prime if its only divisors are of the form "ux" where "u" is any of the six units.It may be shown that an ordinary
prime number (or "rational prime") which is 3 or congruent to 1 mod 3 is of the form "x"2−"xy"+"y"2 for some integers "x","y" and may be therefore factored into ("x"+ω"y")("x"+ω2"y") and because of that it is not prime in the Eisenstein integers. Ordinary primes congruent to 2 mod 3 cannot be factored in this way and they are primes in the Eisenstein integers as well.Every Eisenstein integer "a" + "b"ω whose norm "a"2−"ab"+"b"2 is a rational prime is an Eisenstein prime. In fact, every Eisenstein prime is of this form, or is a product of a unit and a rational prime congruent to 2 mod 3.
Euclidean domain
The ring of Eisenstein integers forms a
Euclidean domain whose norm "N" is given by:This can be derived as follows::
ee also
*
Gaussian integer
*Kummer ring
*Systolic geometry
*Hermite constant
*Cubic reciprocity
*Loewner's torus inequality External links
* [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/EisensteinInteger.html Eisenstein Integer--from MathWorld]
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