In
mathematics, more specifically in
abstract algebra, 'Galois theory', named after
Évariste Galois, provides a connection between
field theory and
group theory. Using Galois theory, certain problems in field theory can be reduced to group theory, which is in some sense simpler and better understood.
Originally Galois used
permutation groups to describe how the various
roots of a given
polynomial equation are related to each other. The modern approach to Galois theory, developed by
Richard Dedekind,
Leopold Kronecker and
Emil Artin, among others, involves studying
automorphisms of
field extensions.
Further abstraction of Galois theory is achieved by the theory of
Galois connections.
Application to classical problems
The birth of Galois theory was originally motivated by the following question, which is known as the
Abel-Ruffini theorem.
:'' "Why is there no formula for the roots of a fifth (or higher) degree polynomial equation in terms of the coefficients of the polynomial, using only the usual algebraic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) and application of radicals (square roots, cube roots, etc)?" ''
Galois theory not only provides a beautiful answer to this question, it also explains in detail why it ''is'' possible to solve equations of degree four or lower in the above manner, and why their solutions take the form that they do.
Galois theory also gives a clear insight into questions concerning problems in
compass and straightedge construction.
It gives an elegant characterisation of the ratios of lengths that can be constructed with this method.
Using this, it becomes relatively easy to answer such classical problems of geometry as
:'' "Which regular
polygons are
constructible polygons?" ''
:'' "Why is it not possible to
trisect every angle?" ''
The permutation group approach to Galois theory
If we are given a polynomial, it may happen that some of the roots of the polynomial are connected by various
algebraic equations. For example, it may turn out that for two of the roots, say ''A'' and ''B'', the equation ''A''
2 + 5''B''
3 = 7 holds. The central idea of Galois theory is to consider those
permutations (or rearrangements) of the roots having the property that ''any'' algebraic equation satisfied by the roots is ''still satisfied'' after the roots have been permuted. An important proviso is that we restrict ourselves to algebraic equations whose coefficients are
rational numbers. (One might instead specify a certain
field in which the coefficients should lie, but for the simple examples below, we will restrict ourselves to the field of rational numbers.)
These permutations together form a
permutation group, also called the
Galois group of the polynomial (over the rational numbers). This can be made much clearer by way of example.
First example — a quadratic equation
Consider the
quadratic equation
:''x''
2 − 4''x'' + 1 = 0.
By using the
quadratic formula, we find that the two roots are
:
:
Examples of algebraic equations satisfied by ''A'' and ''B'' include
:''A'' + ''B'' = 4, and
:''AB'' = 1.
Obviously, in either of these equations, if we exchange ''A'' and ''B'', we obtain another true statement. For example, the equation ''A'' + ''B'' = 4 becomes simply ''B'' + ''A'' = 4. Furthermore, it is true, but far less obvious, that this holds for ''every'' possible
algebraic equation satisfied by ''A'' and ''B''; to prove this requires the theory of
symmetric polynomials.
We conclude that the Galois group of the polynomial ''x''
2 − 4''x'' + 1 consists of two permutations: the
identity permutation which leaves ''A'' and ''B'' untouched, and the
transposition permutation which exchanges ''A'' and ''B''. It is a
cyclic group of order two, and therefore
isomorphic to 'Z'/2'Z'.
One might raise the objection that ''A'' and ''B'' are related by yet another algebraic equation,
:
which does ''not'' remain true when ''A'' and ''B'' are exchanged. However, this equation does not concern us, because it does not have rational coefficients; in particular,
is
not rational.
A similar discussion applies to any quadratic polynomial ''ax''
2 + ''bx'' + ''c'', where ''a'', ''b'' and ''c'' are rational numbers.
★ If the polynomial has only one root, for example ''x''
2 − 4''x'' + 4 = (''x''−2)
2, then the Galois group is trivial; that is, it contains only the identity permutation.
★ If it has two distinct ''rational'' roots, for example ''x''
2 − 3''x'' + 2 = (''x''−2)(''x''−1), the Galois group is again trivial.
★ If it has two ''irrational'' roots (including the case where the roots are
complex), then the Galois group contains two permutations, just as in the above example.
Second example — somewhat trickier
Consider the polynomial
:''x''
4 − 10''x''
2 + 1,
which can also be written as
:(''x''
2 − 5)
2 − 24.
We wish to describe the Galois group of this polynomial, again over the field of
rational numbers. The polynomial has four roots:
:
:
:
:
There are 24 possible ways to permute these four roots, but not all of these permutations are members of the Galois group. The members of the Galois group must preserve any algebraic equation with rational coefficients involving ''A'', ''B'', ''C'' and ''D''. One such equation is
:''A'' + ''D'' = 0.
Therefore the permutation
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''A'', ''B'', ''D'', ''C'')
is not permitted, because it transforms the valid equation ''A'' + ''D'' = 0 into the equation ''A'' + ''C'' = 0, which is invalid since
.
Another equation that the roots satisfy is
:(''A'' + ''B'')
2 = 8.
This will exclude further permutations, such as
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''A'', ''C'', ''B'', ''D'').
Continuing in this way, we find that the only permutations (satisfying both equations simultaneously) remaining are
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'')
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''C'', ''D'', ''A'', ''B'')
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''B'', ''A'', ''D'', ''C'')
:(''A'', ''B'', ''C'', ''D'') → (''D'', ''C'', ''B'', ''A''),
and the Galois group is isomorphic to the
Klein four-group.
The modern approach by field theory
In the modern approach, one starts with a
field extension ''L''/''K'', and examines the group of field
automorphisms of ''L''/''K''. See the article on
Galois groups for further explanation and examples.
The connection between the two approaches is as follows. The coefficients of the polynomial in question should be chosen from the base field ''K''. The top field ''L'' should be the field obtained by adjoining the roots of the polynomial in question to the base field. Any permutation of the roots which respects algebraic equations as described above gives rise to an automorphism of ''L''/''K'', and vice versa.
In the first example above, we were studying the extension
, where 'Q' is the field of
rational numbers, and
is the field obtained from 'Q' by adjoining
. In the second example, we were studying the extension 'Q'(''A'',''B'',''C'',''D'')/'Q'.
There are several advantages to the modern approach over the permutation group approach.
★ It permits a far simpler statement of the
fundamental theorem of Galois theory.
★ The use of base fields other than 'Q' is crucial in many areas of mathematics. For example, in
algebraic number theory, one often does Galois theory using
number fields,
finite fields or
local fields as the base field.
★ It allows one to more easily study infinite extensions. Again this is important in algebraic number theory, where for example one often discusses the
absolute Galois group of 'Q', defined to be the Galois group of ''K''/'Q' where ''K'' is an
algebraic closure of 'Q'.
★ It allows for consideration of
inseparable extensions. This issue does not arise in the classical framework, since it was always implicitly assumed that arithmetic took place in
characteristic zero, but nonzero characteristic arises frequently in number theory and in
algebraic geometry.
★ It removes the rather artificial reliance on chasing roots of polynomials. That is, different polynomials may yield the same extension fields, and the modern approach recognizes the connection between these polynomials.
Solvable groups and solution by radicals
The notion of a
solvable group in
group theory allows us to determine whether a polynomial is solvable in the radicals, depending on whether its Galois group has the property of solvability. In essence, each field extension ''L''/''K'' corresponds to a
factor group in a
composition series of the Galois group. If a factor group in the composition series is
cyclic of order ''n'', then the corresponding field extension is a radical extension, and the elements of ''L'' can then be expressed using the ''n''th root of some element of ''K''.
If all the factor groups in its composition series are cyclic, the Galois group is called ''solvable'', and all of the elements of the corresponding field can be found by repeatedly taking roots, products, and sums of elements from the base field (usually 'Q').
One of the great triumphs of Galois Theory was the proof that for every ''n'' > 4, there exist polynomials of degree ''n'' which are not solvable by radicals—the Abel-Ruffini theorem. This is due to the fact that for ''n'' > 4 the
symmetric group ''S''
''n'' contains a
simple, non-cyclic,
normal subgroup.
A non-solvable quintic example
Van der Waerden cites the polynomial ''f''(x) = ''x''
5−x−1. By the
rational root theorem it has no rational zeros. Neither does it have linear factors modulo 2 or 3.
''f''(''x'') has the factorization (''x''
2+''x''+1)(''x''
3+''x''
2+1) modulo 2. That means its Galois group modulo 2 is cyclic of order 6.
''f''(''x'') has no quadratic factor modulo 3. Thus its Galois group modulo 3 has order 5.
A permutation group on 5 objects with operations of orders 6 and 5 must be the symmetric group ''S''
5, which must be the Galois group of ''f''(''x''). This is one of the simplest examples of a non-solvable quintic polynomial.
Serge Lang said that Artin was fond of this example.
The inverse Galois problem
Main articles: Inverse Galois problem
All finite groups do occur as Galois groups. It is easy to construct field extensions with any given finite group as Galois group, as long as one does not also specify the ground field.
For that, choose a field ''K'' and a finite group ''G''.
Cayley's theorem says that ''G'' is (up to isomorphism) a subgroup of the
symmetric group ''S'' on the elements of ''G''. Choose indeterminates {''x''
α}, one for each element α of ''G'', and adjoin them to ''K'' to get the field ''F'' = ''K''({''x''
α}). Contained within ''F'' is the field ''L'' of symmetric
rational functions in the {''x''
α}. The Galois group of ''F''/''L'' is ''S'', by a basic result of Emil Artin. ''G'' acts on ''F'' by restriction of action of ''S''. If the fixed field of this action is ''M'', then, by the
fundamental theorem of Galois theory, the Galois group of ''F''/''M'' is ''G''.
It is an open problem to prove the existence of a field extension of the rational field 'Q' with a given finite group as Galois group. Hilbert played a part in solving the problem for all symmetric and alternating groups.
Igor Shafarevich proved that every solvable finite group is the Galois group of some extension of 'Q'. Various people have solved the inverse Galois problem for selected non-abelian simple groups. Existence of solutions has been shown for all but possibly one (
Mathieu group M
23) of the 26 sporadic simple groups. There is even a polynomial with integral coefficients whose Galois group is the
Monster group.
References
★
Galois Theory, Emil Artin, , , Dover Publications, 1998, ISBN 0-486-62342-4 ''(Reprinting of second revised edition of 1944, The University of Notre Dame Press)''.
★
Galois Theory for Beginners: A Historical Perspective, Jörg Bewersdorff, , , American Mathematical Society, 2006, ISBN 0-8218-3817-2 .
★
Basic Algebra I (2nd ed), Nathan Jacobson, , , W.H. Freeman and Company, 1985, ISBN 0-7167-1480-9 ''(Chapter 4 gives an introduction to the field-theoretic approach to Galois theory.)''
★
Foundations of Galois Theory, M. M. Postnikov, , , Dover Publications, 2004, ISBN 0-486-43518-0
★
Galois Theory, Ian Stewart, , , Chapman and Hall, 1989, ISBN 0-412-34550-1
★
Galois Theory, Harold M. Edwards, , , Springer-Verlag, 1984, ISBN 0-387-90980-X ''(Galois' original paper, with extensive background and commentary.)''
★ B. L. van der Waerden, 'Algebra' (1930)
★ Helmut Völklein, 'Groups as Galois Groups: An Introduction', Cambridge University Press (1996).
★ Serge Lang, 'Algebraic Number Theory', Addison-Wesley (1970).
External links
Some on-line tutorials on Galois theory appear at:
★ http://www.math.niu.edu/~beachy/aaol/galois.html
★ http://nrich.maths.org/public/viewer.php?obj_id=1422
Online textbooks in French, German, Italian and English can be found at:
★ http://www.galois-group.net/