Galois theory\n\nCategory:Field theoryCategory:Group theory\nIn mathematics, Galois theory is that branch of abstract algebra which studies the symmetries of the roots of polynomials. In other words, the Galois theory is the study of solutions to polynomials and how the different solutions are related to each other. Symmetries are usually expressed in terms of symmetry groups, and in fact the very notion of a group was invented by Evariste Galois to describe symmetries of roots. Galois connections describe special relations between partially ordered sets.
Another exampleFor a trickier example, consider the polynomial
Modern approach by field theoryIn the modern approach, the setting is changed somewhat, in order to achieve a precise and more general definition: one starts with a field extension L/K and defines its Galois group as the group of all field automorphisms of L which keep all elements of K fixed. In the example above, we computed the Galois group of the field extension Q(a,b,c,d)/Q.Solvable groups and solution by radicalsThe notion of a solvable group in group theory allows us to determine whether or not a polynomial is solvable in the radicals, depending on whether or not its Galois group has the property of solvability. In essence, each field extension L/K corresponds to a factor group in a composition series of the Galois group. If a factor group in the composition series is cyclic of order n, then the corresponding field extension is a radical extension, and the elements of L can then be expressed using the nth root of some element of K. If all the factor groups in its composition series are cyclic, the Galois group is called solvable, and all of the elements of the corresponding field can be found by repeatedly taking roots, products, and sums of elements from the base field (usually Q). One of the great triumphs of Galois Theory was the proof that for every n > 4, there exist polynomials of degree n which are not solvable by radicals. This is due to the fact that for n > 4 the symmetric group Sn contains a simple, non-cyclic, normal subgroup.Inverse problemsIt is easy to construct field extensions with a given Galois group: Choose a field K and a group G. Cayley's theorem says that G is (up to isomorphism) a subgroup of the symmetric group S on the elements of G. Choose indeterminates {xα}, one for each element α of G, and adjoin them to K to get the field K({xα}). Contained within K({xα}) is the field L of symmetric rational functions in the {xα}. The Galois group of L over K is S, by a basic result of Artin. G acts on L by mapping xαxβ to xαβ, and if the fixed field of this action is M, then, by the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory, the Galois group of L over M is G. It is an open problem (in general) how to construct field extensions of a fixed ground field with a given Galois group. This is called the inverse Galois problem, and is usually posed for extensions of the rational number field Q. There is a great deal of detailed information in particular cases.External linksSome on-line tutorials on Galois theory appear at:\n* http://www.math.niu.edu/~beachy/aaol/galois.html\n* http://nrich.maths.org/mathsf/journalf/feb02/art2/index_l2h.html\nOnline textbooks in French, German, Italian and English can be found at:\n* http://www.galois-group.net/ |
||
"Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It's the transition that's troublesome." - Isaac Asimov |
