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Pink (Year 3) PYDC 2009-2010

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MA3A6Term 2
Algebraic Number Theory15 CATS

Status: List A

Commitment: 30 one-hour lectures.

Prerequisites: MA251 Algebra I, MA249 Algebra II.

Content: Algebraic number theory is the study of algebraic numbers, which are the roots of monic polynomials $x^n + a_{n-1}x^{n-1}  + \cdots + a_1x+a_0$ with rational coefficients, and algebraic integers, which are the roots of monic polynomials with integer coefficients. So, for example, $n^{\rm th}$ roots of natural numbers are algebraic integers, and so is $(\sqrt{5} + 1)/2$ . The study of these types of numbers leads to results about the ordinary integers, such as determining which of them can be expressed as the sum of two integral squares, proving that any natural number is a sum of four squares and, as a much more advanced application, which combines algebraic number theory with techniques from analysis, the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.

One of the differences between rings of algebraic integers and the ordinary integers, is that we do not always get unique factorization into irreducible elements. For example, in the ring $\{ a + b \sqrt{5} \mid a,b \in \Z \}$ , it turns out that 6 has two distinct factorizations into irreducibles: $6 = 2 \times 3$ and $6 = (1-\sqrt{5}) \times (1 + \sqrt{5})$ . However, we do get a unique factorization theorem for ideals, and this is the central result of the module.

This main result will be followed by some more straightforward geometric material on lattices in $\R^n$ , with applications to sums of squares theorems, and then finally various groups associated with the ideals in a number field.

  • Algebraic numbers, algebraic integers, algebraic number fields, integral bases, discriminants, norms and traces.

  • Quadratic and cyclotomic fields.

  • Factorization of algebraic integers into irreducibles, Euclidean and principal ideal domains.

  • Ideals, and the prime factorization of ideals.

  • Lattices.

  • Minkowski's Theorem. Application: every integer is the sum of four squares.

  • The geometric representation of algebraic numbers.

  • The ideal class group.

Aims: To demonstrate that uniqueness of factorization into irreducibles can fail in rings of algebraic integers, but that it can be replaced by the uniqueness of factorization into prime ideals.

To introduce some geometric lattice-theoretic techniques and their applications to algebraic number theory.

Objectives: By the end of the course students will:

  • be able to compute norms and discriminants and to use them to determine the integer rings in algabraic number fields;

  • be able to factorize ideals into prime ideals in algebraic number fields in straightforward examples;

  • understand the proof of Minkowski's Theorem on lattices, and be able to apply it, for example, to prove that all positive integers are the sum of four squares.

Books:

This module is based on the book ``Algebraic Number Theory'', by I.N. Stewart and D.O. Tall, Chapman & Hall, and the contents of the module forms a proper subset of the material in that book.

Note that there is now a new edition of the book entitled ``Algebraic Number Theory and Fermat's last Theorem'', published by A.K. Peters.

Assessment: Three-hour examination (100%).

Lecturer: William Hart

Section: 

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