Field (mathematics)
In abstract algebra, a field is an algebraic structure in which the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division (except division by zero) may be performed and the associative, commutative, and distributive rules hold, which are familiar from the arithmetic of ordinary numbers.Fields are important objects of study in algebra since they provide the proper generalization of number domains, such as the sets of rational numbers, real numbers, or complex numbers. Fields used to be called rational domains.
The concept of a field is of use, for example, in defining vectorss and matrices, two structures in linear algebra whose components can be elements of an arbitrary field. Galois theory studies the symmetry of equations by investigating the ways in which fields can be contained in each other. See Field theory (mathematics) for more.
| Table of contents |
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2 Examples of Fields 3 Some first theorems 4 Constructing new fields from given ones 5 History 6 Related topics |
Definition
A field is a commutative ring (F, +, *) such that 0 does not equal 1 and all elements of F except 0 have a multiplicative inverse.Spelled out, this means that the following hold:
; Closure of F under + and * : For all a,b belonging to F, both a + b and a * b belong to F (or more formally, + and * are binary operations on F);
; Both + and * are associative : For all a,b,c in F, a + (b + c) = (a + b) + c and a * (b * c) = (a * b) * c.
; Both + and * are commutative : For all a,b belonging to F, a + b = b + a and a * b = b * a.
; The operation * is distributive over the operation + : For all a,b,c, belonging to F, a * (b + c) = (a * b) + (a * c).
; Existence of an additive identity : There exists an element 0 in F, such that for all a belonging to F, a + 0 = a.
; Existence of a multiplicative identity : There exists an element 1 in F different from 0, such that for all a belonging to F, a * 1 = a.
; Existence of additive inverses : For every a belonging to F, there exists an element -a in F, such that a + (-a) = 0.
; Existence of multiplicative inverses : For every a ≠ 0 belonging to F, there exists an element a-1 in F, such that a * a-1 = 1.
The requirement 0 ≠ 1 ensures that the set which only contains a single zero is not a field. Directly from the axioms, one may show that (F, +) and (F - {0}, *) are commutative groups and that therefore (see elementary group theory) the additive inverse -a and the multiplicative inverse a-1 are uniquely determined by a. Furthermore, the multiplicative inverse of a product is equal to the product of the inverses:
- (a*b)-1 = a-1 * b-1
- -a = (-1) * a
- -(a * b) = (-a) * b = a * (-b)
- a * 0 = 0,
Examples of Fields
- The rational
numbers Q = { a/b | a, b
in Z, b ≠ 0 } where Z is the set
of integers.
- The
real numbers R
.
- The complex
numbers C.
- The smallest field has only two elements:
0 and 1. It is sometimes denoted by F2 or Z2
and can be defined by the two tables
+ 0 1 * 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1
- It has important
uses in computer
science, especially in cryptography
and coding theory.
- More generally: if q > 1 is a power of a prime
number, then there exists (up
to isomorphism) exactly one finite
field with q elements. No other finite fields exist. For instance,
for a prime number p, the set of integers modulo p is a finite
field with p elements: this is often written as Zp
= {0,1,...,p-1} where the operations are defined by performing the operation in
Z, dividing by p and taking the remainder, see modular
arithmetic.
- The real numbers contain several interesting fields:
the real algebraic
numbers, the computable
numbers, and the definable
numbers.
- The complex numbers contain the field of algebraic
numbers, the algebraic
closure of Q.
- The rational numbers can be extended
to the fields of p-adic
numbers for every prime number p.
- Let E and
F be two fields with E a subfield of F (i.e., a subset
of F containing 0 and 1, closed under the operations + and * of F
and with its own operations defined by restriction). Let x be an element
of F not in E. Then E(x) is defined to be
the smallest subfield of F containing E and x. For
instance, Q(i) is the subfield of the complex numbers
C consisting of all numbers of the form a+bi where both
a and b are rational numbers.
- For a given field
F, the set F(X) of rational functions in the variable
X with coefficients in F is a field; this is defined as the
set of quotients of polynomials
with coefficients in F.
- If F is a field, and p(X)
is an irreducible
polynomial in the polynomial ring F[X], then the quotient
F[X]/<p(X)> is a field with a subfield isomorphic
to F. For instance, R[X]/<X2+1>
is a field (in fact, it is isomorphic to the field of complex numbers).
- When
F is a field, the set F((X)) of formal
Laurent series over F is a field.
- If V is an
algebraic variety over F,
then the rational functions V → F form a field, the function
field of V.
- If S is a Riemann
surface, then the meromorphic functions S → C
form a field.
- If I is an index set, U is an ultrafilter
on I, and Fi is a field for every i
in I, the ultraproduct
of the Fi (using U) is a field.
- The
hyperreal
numbers form a field containing the reals, plus infinitesimal and infinite
numbers.
- The surreal
numbers form a field containing the reals, except for the fact that they are
a proper class, not a set. The set of all surreal numbers with birthday smaller
than some inaccessible cardinal
number form a field.
- The nimbers
form a field, again except for the fact that they are a proper class. The set
of nimbers with birthday smaller than 2^(2^n), the nimbers with birthday
smaller than any infinite cardinal
are all examples of fields.
Some first theorems
- The set of non-zero elements of a field F
(typically denoted by F×) is an abelian group under
multiplication. Every finite subgroup of F× is cyclic.
- The characteristic
of any field is zero or a prime
number. (The characteristic is defined as the smallest positive integer n
such that n·1 = 0, or zero if no such n exists; here n·1
stands for n summands 1 + 1 + 1 + ... + 1.)
- The number of
elements in finite fields is a prime power.
- As a ring, a field has
no ideals except {0} and itself.
- For every field F, there exists a (up to isomorphism) unique
field G which contains F, is algebraic
over F, and is algebraically
closed. G is called the algebraic closure or F.
Constructing new fields from given ones
- If a subset E of a field (F,+,*) together with the operations *,+ restricted to E is itself a field, then it is called a subfield of F. Such a subfield has the same 0 and 1 as F.
- The polynomial field F(x) is the field of fractions of polynomials in x with coefficients in F.
- An algebraic
extension of a field F is the smallest field containing F
and a root of an irreducible polynomial p(x) in F[x].
Alternatively, it is identical to the factor
ring F[x]/<p(x)>, where <p(x)>
is the
ideal generated by p(x).
History
See Field theory (mathematics).Related topics
See Glossary of field theory for more definitions in field theory.\n


