Perfect field
In algebra, a field is perfect if any one of the following equivalent conditions holds:
- Every irreducible polynomial over has no multiple roots in any field extension .
- Every irreducible polynomial over has non-zero formal derivative.
- Every irreducible polynomial over is separable.
- Every finite extension of is separable.
- Every algebraic extension of is separable.
- Either has characteristic 0, or, when has characteristic , every element of is a -th power.
- Either has characteristic 0, or, when has characteristic , the Frobenius endomorphism is an automorphism.
- The separable closure of is algebraically closed.
- Every reduced commutative -algebra is a separable algebra; i.e., is reduced for every field extension .
Otherwise, is called imperfect.
In particular, all fields of characteristic zero and all finite fields are perfect.
Perfect fields are significant because Galois theory over these fields becomes simpler, since the general Galois assumption of field extensions being separable is automatically satisfied over these fields (see third condition above).
Another important property of perfect fields is that they admit Witt vectors.
More generally, a ring of characteristic ( a prime) is called perfect if the Frobenius endomorphism is an automorphism.[1] When restricted to integral domains, this is equivalent to the above condition "every element of is a -th power".
Examples
Examples of perfect fields are:
- every field of characteristic zero, so and its finite extensions, as well as and ;[2]
- every finite field ;[3]
- every algebraically closed field;
- the union of a set of perfect fields totally ordered by extension;
- fields algebraic over a perfect field.
Most fields that are encountered in practice are perfect. The imperfect case arises mainly in algebraic geometry in characteristic . Every imperfect field is necessarily transcendental over its prime subfield (the minimal subfield), because the latter is perfect.
An example of an imperfect field is the field of rational polynomials in the unknown . This can be seen from the fact that the Frobenius endomorphism sends and therefore is not surjective. Equivalently, one can show that the polynomial , which is an element of , is irreducible but inseparable.
Imperfect fields cause technical difficulties because irreducible polynomials can become reducible in the algebraic closure of the base field. For example,[4] consider for an imperfect field of characteristic and not a -th power in . Then in its algebraic closure , the following equality holds:
where and such a exists in this algebraic closure. Geometrically, this means that does not define an affine plane curve in .
Field extension over a perfect field
Any finitely generated field extension over a perfect field is separably generated, i.e. admits a separating transcendence base, that is, a transcendence base such that is separably algebraic over .[5]
Perfect closure and perfection
Every field can be embedded in a perfect field: in characteristic , a field adjoined with all -th roots () is perfect; it is called the perfect closure of and usually denoted by . For example, embeds into .
The perfect closure can be used in a test for separability. More precisely, a commutative -algebra is separable if and only if is reduced.[6]
The perfect closure can be defined by a universal property: the perfect closure of a ring of characteristic is a perfect ring of characteristic together with a ring homomorphism such that for any other perfect ring of characteristic with a homomorphism , there is a unique homomorphism such that factors through (i.e. ). The perfect closure always exists; the proof involves "adjoining -th roots of elements of ", similar to the case of fields.[7]
The perfection of a ring of characteristic is the dual notion (though this term is sometimes used for the perfect closure). In other words, the perfection of is a perfect ring of characteristic together with a map such that for any perfect ring of characteristic equipped with a map , there is a unique map such that factors through (i.e. ). The perfection of may be constructed as follows. Consider the projective system
where the transition maps are the Frobenius endomorphism. The inverse limit of this system is and consists of sequences of elements of such that for all . The map sends to .[8]
See also
- p-ring
- Perfect ring
- Quasi-finite field
Notes
- ^ Serre 1979, Section II.4
- ^ Examples of fields of characteristic zero include the field of rational numbers, the field of real numbers or the field of complex numbers.
- ^ Any finite field of order q may be denoted , where q = pk for some prime p and positive integer k.
- ^ Milne, James. Elliptic Curves (PDF). p. 6.
- ^ Matsumura, Theorem 26.2
- ^ Cohn 2003, Theorem 11.6.10
- ^ Bourbaki 2003, Section V.5.1.4, page 111
- ^ Brinon & Conrad 2009, section 4.2
References
- Bourbaki, Nicolas (2003), Algebra II, Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-00706-7
- Brinon, Olivier; Conrad, Brian (2009), CMI Summer School notes on p-adic Hodge theory (PDF), retrieved 2010-02-05
- Cohn, P.M. (2003), Basic Algebra: Groups, Rings and Fields
- Lang, Serge (2002), Algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 211 (Revised third ed.), New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-95385-4, MR 1878556, Zbl 0984.00001
- Matsumura, Hideyuki (2003), Commutative ring theory, Translated from the Japanese by M. Reid. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 8 (2nd ed.)
- Serre, Jean-Pierre (1979), Local fields, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 67 (2 ed.), Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-90424-5, MR 0554237
External links
- "Perfect field", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]