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Solutions2018

The document contains solutions to problems from a May 2018 exam on Galois Theory, addressing various assertions about field extensions and their properties. Key topics include the irreducibility of polynomials, the structure of Galois groups, and the conditions for separability and solvability of extensions. The solutions provide specific examples and criteria related to field embeddings, minimal polynomials, and the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory.

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robjenkins208
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
6 views

Solutions2018

The document contains solutions to problems from a May 2018 exam on Galois Theory, addressing various assertions about field extensions and their properties. Key topics include the irreducibility of polynomials, the structure of Galois groups, and the conditions for separability and solvability of extensions. The solutions provide specific examples and criteria related to field embeddings, minimal polynomials, and the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory.

Uploaded by

robjenkins208
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CCM326, Galois Theory May 2018 Exam Solutions

A1. Suppose that K ⊂ E ⊂ L is a tower of field extensions of finite degree,


and let α be an element of L. Determine whether each of the following
assertions is always true, or may be false. Simply state TRUE or FALSE;
you do not need to justify your answer.
a) If L = E(α), then L = K(α).
Solution: FALSE
b) The minimal polynomial of α over K is divisible in E[X] by the
minimal polynomial of α over E.
Solution: TRUE
c) If L is Galois over K, then L is Galois over E.
Solution: TRUE
d) If L is Galois over E and E is Galois over K, then L is Galois over
K.
Solution: FALSE
e) If L is solvable over E and E is solvable over K, then L is solvable
over K.
Solution: TRUE

A2. Let K denote the field Q(i, 3).
a) Describe all the field embeddings τ : K → √ C.
Solution: There are two embeddings Q( 3) → C (corresponding
√ √
to the two roots of m√3,Q = X 2 − 3), determined by σ1 ( 3) = 3
√ √ √
and σ2 ( 3) = − 3). Since X 2 + 1 has no roots in Q( √ 3) (and
is quadratic), it is the minimal polynomial of i over Q( 3), so the
extensions of both σ1 and σ2 to embeddings K → C correspond
to the roots of X 2 + 1 in C, namely ±i. Therefore we obtain four
embeddings K → C, described by:
√ √
τ1 (√3) = √3, τ1 (i) = i
τ2 (√3) = √ 3, τ2 (i) = −i
τ3 (√3) = −√3, τ3 (i) = i
τ4 ( 3) = − 3, τ4 (i) = −i

b) Find an element α ∈√K such that K = Q(α).


Solution: Let α = 3 + i. Then the values of τi (α) for i = 1, 2, 3, 4
are distinct, so K = Q(α).
c) State whether K Galois over Q; justify your answer.
Solution: K is Galois over Q: For any√extension √ M of K and any
(Q-)embedding τ : K → M , we have τ ( 3) = ± 3 ∈ K and τ (i) =
±i ∈ K, so τ (K) ⊂ K. Therefore K is normal over Q, and K is
separable over Q since it has characteristic zero.

1
A3. Let f (X) = X 3 − X + 2 ∈ Q[X] and let L be a splitting field of f over Q.
a) Determine the structure of the Galois group Gal(L/Q).
Solution: By Gauss’s Lemma, the only possible roots of f are ±1
and ±2, but f (1) = f (−1) = 2, f (2) = 8 and f (−2) = −4, so f has
no roots in Q, and is therefore irreducible. The discriminant of f is
−4(−1)3 − 27 · 22 = −23 · 13, which is not a square in Q, so Gal(L/Q)
is isomorphic to S3 .
b) Describe all the subfields of L that are Galois over Q.
Solution: The subfields of L that are normal over Q are the fixed
fields of the normal subgroups of Gal(L/Q). By (a), this group is
isomorphic to S3 , which has 3 normal subgroups: S3 , A3 and {e}.
The fixed field of S3 is Q, the fixed field of {e} is L, and since A3
is the unique subgroup of index 2 in S3 , its fixed field is the unique
subfield√E ⊂ L such√that [E : Q] = 2. By results from lecture, this is
E = Q( ∆) = Q(i 26).
A4. Let K ⊂ L be a finite extension of fields. Suppose that α ∈ L, and let
f ∈ K[X] be the minimal polynomial of α over K.
a) State a criterion involving the derivative of f that is equivalent to
the separability of α. (You do not need to prove this equivalence.)
Solution: α is separable if and only if gcd(f, f 0 ) = 1 (or equivalently
f 0 6= 0 since f is irreducible in K[X] and deg f 0 < deg f ).
b) Prove that if K has prime characteristic p and the degree of f is not
divisible by p, then α is separable over K.
Solution: If f has degree n, then the leading term of f is X n , so the
leading term of f 0 is nX n−1 . Therefore f 0 6= 0 if n is not divisible by
p, so α is separable by the criterion in a).
c) Prove that if [L : K] is not divisible by the characteristic of K, then
L is separable over K.
Solution: If K has characteristic zero, then L is separable over K,
so we can assume K has prime characteristic p. For any β ∈ L, the
Tower Law applied to K ⊂ K(β) ⊂ L shows that [K(β) : K] divides
[L : K], so if [L : K] is not divisible by p, then neither is [K(β) : K].
Since the minimal polynomial of β over K has degree [K(β) : K], it
follows from b) that β is separable over K. Therefore L is separable
over K.
A5. Let K denote the field Z/3Z, and consider the polynomial

f (X) = X 4 + X 3 + X 2 + X + 1

in K[X]. Let L be a splitting field of f over K, and let α ∈ L be a root


of f .

2
a) Find the order of α in L× , and prove that f is irreducible in K[X].
Solution: Since α5 − 1 = (α − 1)f (α) = 0, we have α5 = 1. On the
other hand α 6= 1 since f (1) = 2 6= 0 in Z/3Z. Therefore α has order
5 in L× .
Let r be the degree of the minimal polynomial mα,K . Note that
r ≤ 4 since mα,K |f , and the order of K(α)× is 3r − 1 since since
r = [K(α) : K]. Therefore 3r − 1 is divisible by 5, which rules out
r = 1, 2 or 3, so we must have r = 4. It follows that f = mα,K , so f
is irreducible.
b) Determine the structure of the Galois group Gal(L/K).
Solution: By results from lectures K(α) is Galois over K, so L =
K(α) has degree 4 over K (by part a), and Gal(L/K) is cyclic, so
Gal(L/K) is isomorphic to Z/4Z.
c) Write down a formula for σ(α) for some element σ ∈ Gal(L/K) other
than the identity. (You may choose the element σ.)
Solution: By results from lecture, Gal(L/K) is generated by the
Frobenius automorphism φ, defined by φ(β) = β 3 . Taking σ = φ, we
have σ(α) = α3 .
B6. a) State the Fundamental Theorem of Galois Theory for extensions of
finite degree. (You do not need to define what it means for an exten-
sion to be Galois.)
Solution: Let K ⊂ L be a finite Galois extension of fields, and let
G = Gal(L/K). Then
i) The maps E 7→ Gal(L/E) and H 7→ LH define mutually inverse,
inclusion-reversing bijections:
   
intermediate fields E,
←→ subgroups H of G .
K⊂E⊂L

ii) An intermediate field E, K ⊂ E ⊂ L, is Galois over K if and only


if the corresponding subgroup H = Gal(L/E) is normal in G, in
which case the restriction map σ 7→ σ|E induces an isomorphism
of groups

G/H −→ Gal(E/K).
p √
b) Let f be the minimal polynomial of 1 + 7 over Q. Find f .
p √ √
Solution: Let α = 1 + 7. Then α2 = 1 + 7, so (α2 − 1)2 = 7.
Therefore α is a root of

f (X) = (X 2 − 1)2 − 7 = X 4 − 2X 2 − 6.

Since f satisfies Eisenstein’s Criterion (with p = 2), it is irreducible


in Q[X], and is therefore the minimal polynomial of α over Q.
c) Let f be as above in (b), and let L be its splitting field. Show that
Gal(L/Q) is isomorphic to a dihedral group of order 8.

3
Solution:√We clearly have that −α is also a root of f , as are ±β if
β 2 = 1 − 7, so L = Q(α, β).
Let K = Q(α), so Q ⊂ K ⊂ L. Note that √ −α is in K, but ±β are
not since they are not in R. Note also that 7 = α2 − 1 ∈ K, so√β is
a root of a quadratic polynomial over K[X], namely X 2 − (1 − 7).
Therefore [L : K] = 2, and since [K : Q] = deg(f ) = 4, the Tower
Law implies that [L : Q] = 8, so G = Gal(L/Q) has order 8.
By results from lecture, G is isomorphic to a transitive subgroup
of S4 , and the only such subgroup of order 8 is isomorphic to the
dihedral group of order 8.
(Alternatively, if we label the roots of f as α1 = α, α2 = −α, α3√=
β and α4 = −β, then we find the four elements of G fixing 7
correspond to the permutations:

e, (12),
(34) and (12)(34),
√ √
and the four elements sending 7 to − 7 interchange {±α} and
{±β}, and must therefore be

(13)(24), (14)(23), (1324) and (1423).

Therefore G is isomorphic to the subgroup of S4 generated by the


elements σ = (12) of order 2 and ρ = (1324) of order 4, satisfying
σρσ = (1432) = ρ−1 , so G is isomorphic to a dihedral group of order
8.)
d) Let L be as above in (c). Determine the number of subfields E ⊂ L
such that [E : Q] = 2.
Solution: The subfields E such that [E : Q] = 2 correspond to
subgroups of G of index 2, i.e. of order 4. Writing the dihedral group
as
{ e, ρ, ρ2 , ρ3 , σ, σρ, σρ2 , σρ3 }
where ρ has order 4, σ has order 2 and ρσ = σρ3 , we find that there
are precisely 3 subgroups of order 4, namely

{ e, ρ, ρ2 , ρ3 }, { e, ρ2 , σ, σρ2 } and { e, ρ2 , σρ, σρ3 }.

Therefore there are 3 subfields E ⊂ L such that [E : Q] = 2.


B8. Let K ⊂ L be a finite extension of fields of characteristic 0.
a) State what it means for the extension L to be radical over K, and
for the extension L to be solvable by radicals over K.
Solution: We say that L is radical over K if L = K(α) for some
α ∈ L such that αn ∈ K for some integer n ≥ 1.
We say that L is solvable by radicals over K if there is a chain of
extensions:
K = L0 ⊂ L1 ⊂ L2 ⊂ · · · ⊂ Lm

4
such that L ⊂ Lm , and for each k = 1, . . . , m, Lk is radical over Lk−1
for k = 1, 2, . . . , m.
b) State what it means for a finite group to be solvable, and for the
extension L to be solvable over K.
Solution: A group G is solvable if there is a chain of subgroups:

{e} = H0 ⊂ H1 ⊂ H2 ⊂ · · · ⊂ Hm = G

such that for each k = 1, . . . , m, Hk−1 is a normal subgroup of Hk ,


and Hk /Hk−1 is a cyclic group.
The extension L is solvable over K if there is a finite extension M of
L such M is Galois over K and Gal(M/K) is a solvable group.
p5

c) Prove that if α = 2 − 3 + e2πi/7 ∈ C, then Q(α) is solvable over
Q. √
Solution: Let L0 = Q, L1 = Q( 3), L2 = L1 (β) where β =
p
5
√ √ 2
2 − 3, √and L3 = L2 (ζ) where ζ = e2πi/7 . Then 3 ∈ L0 ,
β 5 = 2 − 3 ∈ L1 , ζ 7 = 1 ∈ L2 , and α = β + ζ ∈ L3 , so Q(α) ⊂ L3 .
Therefore Q(α) is solvable by radicals over Q. By a theorem from
lecture, this is equivalent to Q(α) being solvable over Q.
d) Prove that if α ∈ C is a root of the polynomial X 5 − 15X 2 + 3, then
Q(α) is not solvable by radicals over Q.
Solution: First note that f (X) = X 5 −15X 2 +3 satisfies Eisenstein’s
Criterion with p = 3, so f is irreducible in Q[X].
We claim that f has 3 exactly real roots. To see this, note that

f 0 (X) = 5X 4 − 30X = 5X(X 3 − 6)



has exactly two real roots X = 0 and X = 3 6. Since f (X) √→ ±∞
as X → ±∞, it follows√that f is increasing on (−∞, 0) and ( 3 6, ∞)
and decreasing on (0, 3 6). Since f (0) = 3 > 0, and

f ( 6) = 6 · 62/3 − 15 · 62/3 + 3 < 0,
3

it follows that f has exactly one real root in each of the 3 intervals.
By results from lecture, we know that Gal(Lf /Q) is isomorphic to S5 ,
which is not solvable. Since any extension of Q(α) which is Galois
over Q must contain Lf , it follows that Q(α) is not solvable over
Q. By a theorem from lecture, this is equivalent to Q(α) not being
solvable over Q.

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