Constructing fields from rings A
commutative ring is a set that is equipped with an addition and multiplication operation and satisfies all the axioms of a field, except for the existence of multiplicative inverses . For example, the integers form a commutative ring, but not a field: the
reciprocal of an integer is not itself an integer, unless . In the hierarchy of algebraic structures fields can be characterized as the commutative rings in which every nonzero element is a
unit (which means every element is invertible). Similarly, fields are the commutative rings with precisely two distinct
ideals, and . Fields are also precisely the commutative rings in which is the only
prime ideal. Given a commutative ring , there are two ways to construct a field related to , i.e., two ways of modifying such that all nonzero elements become invertible: forming the field of fractions, and forming residue fields. The field of fractions of is , the rationals, while the residue fields of are the finite fields .
Field of fractions Given an
integral domain , its
field of fractions is built with the fractions of two elements of exactly as
Q is constructed from the integers. More precisely, the elements of are the fractions where and are in , and . Two fractions and are equal if and only if . The operation on the fractions work exactly as for rational numbers. For example, : \frac{a}{b}+\frac{c}{d} = \frac{ad+bc}{bd}. It is straightforward to show that, if the ring is an integral domain, the set of the fractions form a field. The field of the
rational fractions over a field (or an integral domain) is the field of fractions of the
polynomial ring . The field of formal
Laurent series : \sum_{i=k}^\infty a_i x^i \ (k \in \Z, a_i \in F) over a field is the field of fractions of the ring of
formal power series (in which ). Since any Laurent series is a fraction of a power series divided by a power of (as opposed to an arbitrary power series), the representation of fractions is less important in this situation, though.
Residue fields In addition to the field of fractions, which embeds
injectively into a field, a field can be obtained from a commutative ring by means of a
surjective map onto a field . Any field obtained in this way is a
quotient , where is a
maximal ideal of . If
has only one maximal ideal , this field is called the
residue field of . The
ideal generated by a single polynomial in the polynomial ring (over a field ) is maximal if and only if is
irreducible in , i.e., if cannot be expressed as the product of two polynomials in of smaller
degree. This yields a field : This field contains an element (namely the
residue class of ) which satisfies the equation : . For example, is obtained from by
adjoining the
imaginary unit symbol , which satisfies , where . Moreover, is irreducible over , which implies that the map that sends a polynomial to yields an isomorphism : \mathbf R[X] \big/ \left(X^2 + 1\right) \ \stackrel \cong \longrightarrow \ \mathbf C.
Constructing fields within a bigger field Fields can be constructed inside a given bigger container field. Suppose given a field , and a field containing as a subfield. For any element of , there is a smallest subfield of containing and , called the subfield of
F generated by and denoted . The passage from to is referred to by
adjoining an element to . More generally, for a subset , there is a minimal subfield of containing and , denoted by . The
compositum of two subfields and of some field is the smallest subfield of containing both and . The compositum can be used to construct the biggest subfield of satisfying a certain property, for example the biggest subfield of , which is, in the language introduced below, algebraic over .
Field extensions The notion of a subfield can also be regarded from the opposite point of view, by referring to being a
field extension (or just extension) of , denoted by : , and read " over ". A basic datum of a field extension is its
degree , i.e., the dimension of as an -vector space. It satisfies the formula : . Extensions whose degree is finite are referred to as finite extensions. The extensions and are of degree , whereas is an infinite extension.
Algebraic extensions A pivotal notion in the study of field extensions are
algebraic elements. An element is
algebraic over if it is a
root of a
polynomial with
coefficients in , that is, if it satisfies a
polynomial equation : , with in , and . For example, the
imaginary unit in is algebraic over , and even over , since it satisfies the equation : . A field extension in which every element of is algebraic over is called an
algebraic extension. Any finite extension is necessarily algebraic, as can be deduced from the above multiplicativity formula. The subfield generated by an element , as above, is an algebraic extension of if and only if is an algebraic element. That is to say, if is algebraic, all other elements of are necessarily algebraic as well. Moreover, the degree of the extension , i.e., the dimension of as an -vector space, equals the minimal degree such that there is a polynomial equation involving , as above. If this degree is , then the elements of have the form : \sum_{k=0}^{n-1} a_k x^k, \ \ a_k \in E. For example, the field of
Gaussian rationals is the subfield of consisting of all numbers of the form where both and are rational numbers: summands of the form (and similarly for higher exponents) do not have to be considered here, since can be simplified to .
Transcendence bases The above-mentioned field of
rational fractions , where is an
indeterminate, is not an algebraic extension of since there is no polynomial equation with coefficients in whose zero is . Elements, such as , which are not algebraic are called
transcendental. Informally speaking, the indeterminate and its powers do not interact with elements of . A similar construction can be carried out with a set of indeterminates, instead of just one. Once again, the field extension discussed above is a key example: if is not algebraic (i.e., is not a
root of a polynomial with coefficients in ), then is isomorphic to . This isomorphism is obtained by substituting to in rational fractions. A subset of a field is a
transcendence basis if it is
algebraically independent (do not satisfy any polynomial relations) over and if is an algebraic extension of . Any field extension has a transcendence basis. Thus, field extensions can be split into ones of the form (
purely transcendental extensions) and algebraic extensions.
Closure operations A field is
algebraically closed if it does not have any strictly bigger algebraic extensions or, equivalently, if any
polynomial equation : , with coefficients , has a solution . By the
fundamental theorem of algebra, is algebraically closed, i.e.,
any polynomial equation with complex coefficients has a complex solution. The rational and the real numbers are
not algebraically closed since the equation : does not have any rational or real solution. A field containing is called an
algebraic closure of if it is
algebraic over (roughly speaking, not too big compared to ) and is algebraically closed (big enough to contain solutions of all polynomial equations). By the above, is an algebraic closure of . The situation that the algebraic closure is a finite extension of the field is quite special: by the
Artin–Schreier theorem, the degree of this extension is necessarily , and is
elementarily equivalent to . Such fields are also known as
real closed fields. Any field has an algebraic closure, which is moreover unique up to (non-unique) isomorphism. It is commonly referred to as
the algebraic closure and denoted . For example, the algebraic closure of is called the field of
algebraic numbers. The field is usually rather implicit since its construction requires the
ultrafilter lemma, a set-theoretic axiom that is weaker than the
axiom of choice. In this regard, the algebraic closure of , is exceptionally simple. It is the union of the finite fields containing (the ones of order ). For any algebraically closed field of characteristic , the algebraic closure of the field of
Laurent series is the field of
Puiseux series, obtained by adjoining roots of . == Fields with additional structure ==