- Fundamental theorem of Galois theory
In
mathematics , the fundamental theorem ofGalois theory is a result that describes the structure of certain types offield extension s.In its most basic form, the theorem asserts that given a field extension "E"/"F" which is finite and Galois, there is a one-to-one correspondence between its
intermediate field s (fields "K" satisfying "F" ⊆ "K" ⊆ "E"; also called subextensions of "E"/"F") andsubgroup s of itsGalois group .Proof
The proof of the fundamental theorem is not trivial. The crux in the usual treatment is a rather delicate result of
Emil Artin which allows one to control the dimension of the intermediate field fixed by a given group of automorphisms. Seelinear independence of automorphisms of a field .There is also a fairly simple proof using the
primitive element theorem . This proof seems to be ignored by most modern treatments, possibly because it requires a separate (but easier) proof in the case of finite fields. See [Marcus, Daniel: "Number Fields", Appendix 2. Springer-Verlag, 1977. ]In terms of its abstract structure, there is a
Galois connection ; most of its properties are fairly formal, but the actual isomorphism of theposet s requires some work.Explicit description of the correspondence
For finite extensions, the correspondence can be described explicitly as follows.
* For any subgroup "H" of Gal("E"/"F"), the corresponding field, usually denoted "EH", is the set of those elements of "E" which are fixed by every automorphism in "H".
* For any intermediate field "K" of "E"/"F", the corresponding subgroup is just Aut("E"/"K"), that is, the set of those automorphisms in Gal("E"/"F") which fix every element of "K".For example, the topmost field "E" corresponds to the trivial subgroup of Gal("E"/"F"), and the base field "F" corresponds to the whole group Gal("E"/"F").
Properties of the correspondence
The correspondence has the following useful properties.
* It is "inclusion-reversing". The inclusion of subgroups "H1 ⊆ H2" holds if and only if the inclusion of fields "EH1" ⊇ "EH2" holds.
* Degrees of extensions are related to orders of groups, in a manner consistent with the inclusion-reversing property. Specifically, if "H" is a subgroup of Gal("E"/"F"), then |"H"| = ["E":"EH"] and [Gal("E"/"F"):"H"] = ["EH":"F"] .
* The field "EH" is anormal extension of "F" if and only if "H" is anormal subgroup of Gal("E"/"F"). In this case, the restriction of the elements of Gal("E"/"F") to "EH" induces an isomorphism between Gal("EH"/"F") and thequotient group Gal("E"/"F")/"H".Example
Consider the field "K" = Q(√2, √3) = Q(√2)(√3). Since "K" is first determined by adjoining √2, then √3, a typical element of "K" can be written as:
:
where "a", "b", "c", "d" are rational numbers. Its Galois group "G" = Gal ("K"/Q) can be determined by examining the automorphisms of "K" which fix "a". Each such automorphism must send √2 to either √2 or −√2, and must send √3 to either √3 or −√3. Suppose that "f" exchanges √2 and −√2, so:and "g" exchanges √3 and −√3, so:These are clearly automorphisms of "K". There is also the identity automorphism "e" which does not change anything, and the composition of "f" and "g" which changes the signs on "both" radicals:
:
Therefore
:
and "G" is isomorphic to the
Klein four-group . It has five subgroups, each of which correspond via the theorem to a subfield of "K".
* The trivial subgroup (containing only the identity element) corresponds to all of "K".
* The entire group "G" corresponds to the base field Q.
* The two-element subgroup {1, "f"} corresponds to the subfield Q(√3), since "f" fixes √3.
* The two-element subgroup {1, "g"} corresponds to the subfield Q(√2), again since "g" fixes √2.
* The two-element subgroup {1, "fg"} corresponds to the subfield Q(√6), since "fg" fixes √6.Example
The following is the simplest case where the Galois group is not abelian.
Consider the
splitting field "K" of the polynomial "x"3−2 over Q; that is, "K" = Q (θ, ω), where θ is a cube root of 2, and ω is a cube root of 1 (but not 1 itself). For example, if we imagine "K" to be inside the field of complex numbers, we may take θ to be the real cube root of 2, and ω to be:It can be shown that the Galois group "G" = Gal ("K"/Q) has six elements, and is isomorphic to the group of permutations of three objects. It is generated by (for example) two automorphisms, say "f" and "g", which are determined by their effect on θ and ω,:: and then:
The subgroups of "G" and corresponding subfields are as follows:
* As usual, the entire group "G" corresponds to the base field Q, and the trivial group {1} corresponds to the whole field "K".
* There is a unique subgroup of order 3, namely {1, "f", "f"2}. The corresponding subfield is Q(ω), which has degree two over Q (the minimal polynomial of ω is "x"2 + "x" + 1), corresponding to the fact that the subgroup has index two in "G". Also, this subgroup is normal, corresponding to the fact that the subfield is normal over Q.
* There are three subgroups of order 2, namely {1, "g"}, {1, "gf"} and {1, "gf"2}, corresponding respectively to the three subfields Q(θ), Q(ωθ), Q(ω2θ). These subfields have degree three over Q, again corresponding to the subgroups having index 3 in G. Note that the subgroups are "not" normal in "G", and this corresponds to the fact that the subfields are "not" Galois over Q. For example, Q(θ) contains only a single root of the polynomial "x"3−2, so it cannot be normal over Q.Applications
The theorem converts the difficult-sounding problem of classifying the intermediate fields of "E"/"F" into the more tractable problem of listing the subgroups of a certain
finite group .For example, to prove that the
general quintic equation is notsolvable by radicals (seeAbel-Ruffini theorem ), one first restates the problem in terms ofradical extension s (extensions of the form "F"(α) where α is an "n"-th root of some element of "F"), and then uses the fundamental theorem to convert this statement into a problem about groups. That can then be attacked directly.Theories such as
Kummer theory andclass field theory are predicated on the fundamental theorem.Infinite case
There is also a version of the fundamental theorem that applies to infinite
algebraic extension s, which are normal and separable. It involves defining a certaintopological structure , theKrull topology , on the Galois group; only subgroups that are alsoclosed set s are relevant in the correspondence.
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