Algebraic Closures

Algebraic Closures and Transcendence

Introduction

While algebraic extensions are central to Galois theory, not all extensions are algebraic. The study of algebraic closures and transcendence provides important tools for understanding the structure of fields and their extensions.

Algebraic Closures

Definition

Definition 21.1: A field F is algebraically closed if every non-constant polynomial in F[x] has a root in F. An algebraic closure of a field K, denoted K or Kalg, is an algebraic extension of K that is algebraically closed.

Properties

Construction

Using Zorn's Lemma, one can prove that every field has an algebraic closure. The construction involves taking the union of all algebraic extensions of the field.

Examples

Example 1: C is the algebraic closure of R.

Example 2: The field of algebraic numbers is the algebraic closure of Q.

Example 3: For any finite field Fq, its algebraic closure is the union of all finite fields Fqn for n1.

Transcendence

Definition

Definition 21.2: A subset S of an extension field L/K is algebraically independent over K if its elements do not satisfy any non-trivial polynomial equation with coefficients in K. A transcendence basis for L/K is a maximal algebraically independent subset of L over K.

Properties

Examples

Example 1: The set {π} is algebraically independent over Q, so the transcendence degree of Q(π)/Q is 1.

Example 2: The set {e,π} is algebraically independent over Q, so the transcendence degree of Q(e,π)/Q is 2.

Example 3: For the field of rational functions K(x1,,xn), the set {x1,,xn} is a transcendence basis over K.

Applications

Application 1: Field Theory

Algebraic closures provide a natural setting for studying field extensions and their properties.

Application 2: Algebraic Geometry

Transcendence theory is important in algebraic geometry for understanding the structure of function fields and varieties.

Application 3: Model Theory

The study of algebraically closed fields is fundamental to model theory and the study of first-order theories.

Examples

Example 1: Algebraic Numbers

The field of algebraic numbers is the algebraic closure of Q. It contains all roots of polynomials with rational coefficients.

Example 2: Function Fields

The field of rational functions K(x1,,xn) has transcendence degree n over K.

Example 3: Transcendental Numbers

Numbers like π and e are transcendental over Q, meaning they are not roots of any non-zero polynomial with rational coefficients.

Advanced Topics

Transcendence Degree

The transcendence degree provides a measure of "size" for infinite extensions, analogous to degree for finite extensions.

Lüroth's Theorem

Theorem 21.3 (Lüroth's Theorem): Let K be a field and let L be a field between K and K(x) for some transcendental element x. Then L=K(f(x)) for some rational function f(x)K(x).

The Ax-Grothendieck Theorem

Theorem 21.4 (Ax-Grothendieck Theorem): Let K be an algebraically closed field and let f:KnKn be an injective polynomial map. Then f is surjective.

Summary

Algebraic closures provide a natural completion of fields with respect to polynomial equations, while transcendence theory provides tools for understanding the structure of infinite extensions.

These concepts are fundamental to field theory and have applications throughout mathematics, from algebraic geometry to model theory to number theory.

The study of algebraic closures and transcendence continues to be an active area of research with connections to many other areas of mathematics.