In
abstract algebra, a 'field' is an
algebraic structure in which the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and
division (except division by zero) may be performed, and the same rules hold which are familiar from the
arithmetic of ordinary
numbers.
All fields are
rings, but not conversely. Fields differ from rings most importantly in the requirement that division be possible, but also, in modern definitions, by the requirement that the multiplication operation in a field be
commutative. Otherwise the structure is a so-called ''skew field'' (better known as a
division ring), although historically division rings were called ''fields'' and fields were ''commutative fields''.
The prototypical example of a field is 'Q,' the field of
rational numbers. Other important examples include the field of
real numbers 'R', the field of
complex numbers 'C' and, for any
prime number ''p'', the
finite field of
integers modulo ''p'', denoted 'Z'/''p'''Z', F
''p'' or GF(''p''). For any field ''K'', the set ''K''(''X'') of
rational functions with coefficients in ''K'' is also a field.
The mathematical discipline concerned with the study of fields is called
field theory.
Equivalent definitions
Definition 1
A ''field'' is a commutative
division ring.
Definition 2
A ''field'' is a
commutative ring (''F'', +,
★ ) such that 0 does not equal 1 and all elements of ''F'' except 0 have a multiplicative inverse. (Note that 0 and 1 here stand for the identity elements for the + and
★ operations respectively, which may differ from the familiar real numbers
0 (number) and
1).
Definition 3
Explicitly, a field is defined by these properties:
:; Closure of ''F'' under + and
★ : For all ''a'', ''b'' belonging to ''F'', both ''a'' + ''b'' and ''a''
★ ''b'' belong to ''F'' (or more formally, + and
★ are
binary operations on ''F'').
:; Both + and
★ are associative : For all ''a'', ''b'', ''c'' in ''F'', ''a'' + (''b'' + ''c'') = (''a'' + ''b'') + ''c'' and ''a''
★ (''b''
★ ''c'') = (''a''
★ ''b'')
★ ''c''.
:; Both + and
★ are commutative : For all ''a'', ''b'' belonging to ''F'', ''a'' + ''b'' = ''b'' + ''a'' and ''a''
★ ''b'' = ''b''
★ ''a''.
:; The operation
★ is distributive over the operation + : For all ''a'', ''b'', ''c'', belonging to ''F'', ''a''
★ (''b'' + ''c'') = (''a''
★ ''b'') + (''a''
★ ''c'').
:; Existence of an additive identity : There exists an element 0 in ''F'', such that for all ''a'' belonging to ''F'', ''a'' + 0 = ''a''.
:; Existence of a multiplicative identity : There exists an element 1 in ''F'' different from 0, such that for all ''a'' belonging to ''F'', ''a''
★ 1 = ''a''.
:; Existence of additive inverses : For every ''a'' belonging to ''F'', there exists an element −''a'' in ''F'', such that ''a'' + (−''a'') = 0.
:; Existence of multiplicative inverses : For every ''a'' ≠ 0 belonging to ''F'', there exists an element ''a''
−1 in ''F'', such that ''a''
★ ''a''
−1 = 1.
The requirement 0 ≠ 1 ensures that the set which only contains a single element is not a field. Directly from the axioms, one may show that (F, +) and (F − {0},
★ ) are commutative
groups (
abelian groups) and that therefore (see
elementary group theory) the additive inverse −''a'' and the multiplicative inverse ''a''
−1 are uniquely determined by ''a''. Other useful rules include
:−''a'' = (−1)
★ ''a''
and more generally
:−(''a
★ b'') = (−''a'')
★ b = ''a''
★ (−''b'')
as well as
:''a''
★ 0 = 0,
all rules familiar from elementary
arithmetic.
If the requirement of commutativity of the operation
★ is dropped, one distinguishes the above 'commutative fields' from 'non-commutative fields'. Fields which are not assumed to be commutative are usually called
division rings or ''skew fields''.
History
The concept of a field is due to
Dedekind, who used the
word ''Körper'' "body" for this notion. He also was the first
to define rings (then called ''order'' or ''order-modul''),
but the term ''"a ring"'' (''Zahlring'') was invented by
Hilbert.
[1]
Examples
★ The
complex numbers 'C', under the usual operations of addition and multiplication. The field of complex numbers contains the following ''subfields'' (a subfield of a field ''F'' is a set containing 0 and 1, closed under the operations + , - and
★ of ''F'' and with its own operations defined by restriction):
★ The
rational numbers 'Q' = { ''a''/''b'' | ''a'', ''b'' in 'Z', ''b'' ≠ 0 } where 'Z' is the set of
integers. The field of rational numbers contains no proper subfields.
★
★ An
algebraic number field is a finite field extension of the
rational numbers 'Q', that is, a field containing 'Q' which has finite dimension as a
vector space over 'Q'. Any such field is isomorphic to a subfield of 'C', and any such isomorphism induces the identity on 'Q'. These fields are very important in
number theory.
★
★ The field of
algebraic numbers
, the
algebraic closure of 'Q'. The field of algebraic numbers is an example of an
algebraically closed field of characteristic zero; as such it satisfies the same
first-order sentences as the field of complex numbers 'C'.
★ The
real numbers 'R', under the usual operations of addition and multiplication. When the real numbers are given the usual ordering, they form a ''complete
ordered field'' ; it is this structure which provides the foundation for most formal treatments of
calculus.
★
★ The real numbers contain several interesting subfields: the real
algebraic numbers, the
computable numbers.
★ There is (
up to isomorphism) exactly one
finite field with ''q'' elements, for every finite number ''q'' which is a power of a
prime number, ''q''≠ 1. (No finite field can exist with any other number of elements.) This is usually denoted 'F'
''q'' . Such fields are often called
Galois fields.
★
★ In particular, for a given prime number ''p'', the set of integers modulo ''p'' is a finite field with ''p'' elements: 'Z'/''p'''Z' = 'F'
''p'' = {0, 1, ..., ''p'' − 1} where the operations are defined by performing the operation in 'Z', dividing by ''p'' and taking the remainder; see
modular arithmetic.
★
★ Taking ''p'' = 2, we obtain the smallest field, 'F'
2, which has only two elements: 0 and 1. It can be defined by the two
Cayley tables
+ '0' '1'
★ '0' '1'
'0' 0 1 '0' 0 0
'1' 1 0 '1' 0 1
::This field has important uses in
computer science, especially in
cryptography and
coding theory.
★ The rational numbers can be extended to the fields of
''p''-adic numbers for every prime number ''p''. These fields are very important in both
number theory and
mathematical analysis.
★ Let ''E'' and ''F'' be two fields with ''F'' a subfield of ''E''. Let ''x'' be an element of ''E'' not in ''F''. Then there is a smallest subfield of ''E'' containing ''F'' and ''x'', denoted ''F''(''x''). We call ''F''(''x'') a ''
simple extension'' of ''F''. For instance, 'Q'(''i'') is the subfield of 'C' consisting of all numbers of the form ''a'' + ''bi'' where both ''a'' and ''b'' are rational numbers. In fact, it can be shown that every number field is a simple extension of 'Q'.
★ For a given field ''F'', the set ''F''(''X'') of
rational functions in the variable ''X'' with coefficients in ''F'' is a field; this is the
quotient field of the ring of
polynomials ''F''[''X'']. This is the simplest example of a
transcendental extension of ''F''.
★ If ''F'' is a field, and ''p''(''X'') is an
irreducible polynomial in the
polynomial ring ''F''[''X''], then the quotient ''F''[''X'']/<''p''(''X'')> , where <''p''(''X'')> denotes the ideal generated by ''p''(''X''), is a field with a subfield isomorphic to ''F''. For instance, 'R'[''X'']/<''X''
2 + 1> is a field (in fact, it is isomorphic to the field of complex numbers). It can be shown that every simple algebraic extension of ''F'' is isomorphic to a field of this form. See the
primitive element theorem.
★ When ''F'' is a field, the set ''F''((''X'')) of
formal Laurent series over ''F'' is a field.
★ If ''V'' is an
algebraic variety over ''F'', then the rational functions ''V'' → ''F'' form a field, the ''function field'' of ''V''.
★ If ''S'' is a
Riemann surface, then the
meromorphic functions ''S'' → 'C' form a field.
★ If ''I'' is an index set, ''U'' is an
ultrafilter on ''I'', and ''F''
''i'' is a field for every ''i'' in ''I'', the
ultraproduct of the ''F''
''i'' with respect to ''U'' is a field.
★
Hyperreal numbers and
superreal numbers extend the real numbers with the addition of infinitesimal and infinite numbers.
There are also proper classes with field structure, which are sometimes called 'Fields', with a capital F:
★ The
surreal numbers form a Field containing the reals, and would be a field except for the fact that they are a proper class, not a set. The set of all surreal numbers with birthday smaller than some
inaccessible cardinal form a field.
★ The
nimbers form a Field. The set of nimbers with birthday smaller than
, the nimbers with birthday smaller than any infinite
cardinal are all examples of fields.
Some first theorems
★ The set of non-zero elements of a field ''F'' (typically denoted by ''F''
×) is an
abelian group under multiplication. Every finite subgroup of ''F''
× is
cyclic.
★ The number of elements of any
finite field is a prime power.
★ If there are positive integers ''n'' such that 0 = 1 + 1 + ... + 1 (''n'' repeated terms), then the smallest such ''n'' must be a prime number; that is, the
characteristic of a field must be either a prime number, or zero.
★ A commutative
ring is a field if and only if it has no
ideals except {0} and itself.
★ Assuming the
axiom of choice, for every field ''F'', there exists a unique field ''G'', up to isomorphism inducing the identity on ''F'', which contains ''F'', is
algebraic over ''F'', and is
algebraically closed. ''G'' is called the
algebraic closure of ''F''. However, in many circumstances in mathematics, it is not appropriate to treat ''G'' as being uniquely determined by ''F'', since the isomorphism above is not itself unique. In these cases, one refers to such a ''G'' as ''an'' algebraic closure of ''F''.
See also
★
Glossary of field theory for more definitions in field theory.
★
Differential field, a field equipped with a
derivation.
★
Integral domain and its
Field of fractions
References
1. J J O'Connor and E F Robertson, ''The development of Ring Theory'', September 2004.
External links
★
Fields at ProvenMath definition and basic properties.
★