In algebraic extensions of the rational numbers Ramification in
algebraic number theory means a prime ideal factoring in an extension so as to give some repeated prime ideal factors. Namely, let \mathcal{O}_K be the
ring of integers of an
algebraic number field K, and \mathfrak{p} a
prime ideal of \mathcal{O}_K. For a field extension L/K we can consider the ring of integers \mathcal{O}_L (which is the
integral closure of \mathcal{O}_K in L), and the ideal \mathfrak{p}\mathcal{O}_L of \mathcal{O}_L. This ideal may or may not be prime, but for finite [L:K], it has a factorization into prime ideals: :\mathfrak{p}\cdot \mathcal{O}_L = \mathfrak{p}_1^{e_1}\cdots\mathfrak{p}_k^{e_k} where the \mathfrak{p}_i are distinct prime ideals of \mathcal{O}_L. Then \mathfrak{p} is said to
ramify in L if e_i > 1 for some i; otherwise it is '
. In other words, \mathfrak{p} ramifies in L if the ramification index' e_i is greater than one for some \mathfrak{p}_i. An equivalent condition is that \mathcal{O}_L/\mathfrak{p}\mathcal{O}_L has a non-zero
nilpotent element: it is not a product of
finite fields. The analogy with the Riemann surface case was already pointed out by
Richard Dedekind and
Heinrich M. Weber in the nineteenth century. The ramification is encoded in K by the
relative discriminant and in L by the
relative different. The former is an ideal of \mathcal{O}_K and is divisible by \mathfrak{p} if and only if some ideal \mathfrak{p}_i of \mathcal{O}_L dividing \mathfrak{p} is ramified. The latter is an ideal of \mathcal{O}_L and is divisible by the prime ideal \mathfrak{p}_i of \mathcal{O}_L precisely when \mathfrak{p}_i is ramified. The ramification is
tame when the ramification indices e_i are all relatively prime to the residue characteristic
p of \mathfrak{p}, otherwise
wild. This condition is important in
Galois module theory. A finite generically étale extension B/A of
Dedekind domains is tame if and only if the trace \operatorname{Tr}: B \to A is surjective.
In local fields The more detailed analysis of ramification in number fields can be carried out using extensions of the
p-adic numbers, because it is a
local question. In that case a quantitative measure of ramification is defined for
Galois extensions, basically by asking how far the
Galois group moves field elements with respect to the metric. A sequence of
ramification groups is defined, reifying (amongst other things)
wild (non-tame) ramification. This goes beyond the geometric analogue. ==In algebra==