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NUMBER
857


(Trรคgheitskรถrper) for ๐”ญ: next after this comes another field of still lower order called the resolving field (Zerlegungskรถrper) for ๐”ญ, and in this field there is a prime of the first degree, ๐”ญ๐‘™๏ผ‹1, such that ๐”ญ๐‘™๏ผ‹1๏ผ๐”ญ๐’Œ, where ๐’Œ๏ผ๐‘šโ€†โˆ•๐‘š๐‘™. In the field of inertia ๐”ญ๐‘™๏ผ‹1 remains a prime, but becomes of higher degree; in ฮฉ๐‘™โ€”1, which is called the branch-field (Verzweigungskรถrper) it becomes a power of a prime, and by going on in this way from the resolving field to ฮฉ, we obtain (๐‘™๏ผ‹2) representations for any prime ideal of the resolving field. By means of these theorems, Hilbert finds an expression for the exact power to which a rational prime ๐’‘ occurs in the discriminant of ฮฉ, and in other ways the structure of ฮฉ becomes more evident. It may be observed that whem ๐‘š is prime the whole series reduces to ฮฉ and the rational field, and we conclude that every prime ideal in ฮฉ is of the first or ๐‘šth degree: this is the case, for instance, when ๐‘š๏ผ2, and is one of the reasons why quadratic fields are comparatively so simple in character.

52. Quadratic Fields.โ€”Let ๐‘š be an ordinary integer different from ๏ผ‹1, and not divisible by any square: then if ๐‘ฅ, ๐‘ฆ assume all ordinary rational values the expressions ๐‘ฅ๏ผ‹๐‘ฆโˆš๐‘š are the elements of a field which may be called ฮฉ(โˆš๐‘š). It should be observed that โˆš๐‘š means one definite root of ๐‘ฅยฒโ€”๐‘š๏ผ0, it does not matter which: it is convenient, however, to agree that โˆš๐‘š is positive when ๐‘š is positive, and ๐‘–โˆš๐‘š is negative when ๐‘š is negative. The principal results relating to ฮฉ will now be stated, and will serve as illustrations of ยงยงโ€†44-51.

In the notation previously used

๐”ฌ๏ผ[1, 1/2(1๏ผ‹โˆš๐‘š)] or [1, โˆš๐‘š]


according as ๐‘šโ‰ก1 (mod 4) or not. In the first case ๐šซ๏ผ๐‘š, in the second ๐šซ๏ผ4๐‘š. The field ฮฉ is normal, and every ideal prime in it is of the first degree.

Let ๐’’ be any odd prime factor of ๐‘š; then ๐’’๏ผ๐”ฎยฒ, where ๐”ฎ is the prime ideal [๐’’, 1/2(๐’’๏ผ‹โˆš๐‘š)] when ๐‘šโ‰ก1 (mod 4) and in other cases [๐’’, โˆš๐‘š]. An odd prime ๐’‘ of which ๐‘š is a quadratic residue is the product of two prime ideals ๐”ญ, ๐”ญโ€ฒ, which may be written in the form [๐’‘, 1/2(๐’‚๏ผ‹โˆš๐‘š)], [๐’‘, 1/2(๐’‚โ€”โˆš๐‘š)] or [๐’‘, ๐’‚๏ผ‹โˆš๐‘š], [๐’‘, ๐’‚โ€”โˆš๐‘š], according as ๐‘šโ‰ก1 (mod 4) or not: here ๐’‚ is a root of ๐‘ฅยฒโ‰ก๐‘š (mod ๐’‘), taken so as to be odd in the first of the two cases. All other rational odd primes are primes in ฮฉ. For the exceptional prime 2 there are four cases to consider: (i.) if ๐‘šโ‰ก1 (mod 8), then 2๏ผ[2,1/2(1๏ผ‹โˆš๐‘š)]ร—[2,1/2(1โ€”โˆš๐‘š)]. (ii.) If ๐‘šโ‰ก5 (mod 8), then 2 is prime: (iii.) if ๐‘šโ‰ก2 (mod 4), 2๏ผ[2,โˆš๐‘š]ยฒ: (iv.) if ๐‘š๏ผ3 (modโ‰ก4), 2๏ผ[2,1๏ผ‹โˆšm)ยฒ. Illustrations will be found in ยง 44 for the case ๐‘š๏ผ23.

53. Normal Residues. Genera.โ€”Hilbert has introduced a very convenient definition, and a corresponding symbol, which is a generalization of Legendreโ€™s quadratic character. Let ๐’, ๐‘š be rational integers, ๐‘š not a square, ๐‘ค any rational prime; we write if, to the modulus ๐‘ค, ๐’ is congruent to the norm of an integer contained in ฮฉ(โˆš๐‘š); in all other cases we put . This new symbol obeys a set of laws, among which may be especially noted and , whenever ๐’, ๐‘š are prime to ๐’‘.

Now let ๐’’ โ‚, ๐’’ โ‚‚ , . . . ๐’’๐‘ก be the different rational prime factors of the discriminant of ฮฉ(โˆš๐‘š); then with any rational integer ๐’‚ we may associate the ๐‘ก symbols


and call them the total character of ๐’‚ with respect to ฮฉ. This definition may be extended so as to give a total character for every ideal ๐”ž in ฮฉ, as follows. First let ฮฉ be an imaginary field (๐‘š๏ผœ0); we put ๐’“๏ผ๐‘ก, ๐’๏ผ๐–ญ(๐”ž), and call


the total character of ๐”ž. Secondly, let ฮฉ be a real field; we first determine the ๐‘ก separate characters of โ€”&#;8198;1, and if they are all positive we put \overline{๐’}๏ผ ๏ผ‹๐–ญ(๐”ž), ๐’“๏ผ๐‘ก, and adopt the ๐’“ characters just written above as those of ๐”ž. Suppose, however, that one of the characters of โ€”1 is negative; without loss of generality we may take it to be that with reference to ๐’’๐‘ก. We then put ๐’“๏ผ๐‘กโ€”1, ๐’๏ผยฑ๐–ญ(๐”ž) taken with such a sign that , and take as the total character of ๐”ž the symbols for ๐‘–๏ผ1, 2, . . . (๐‘ก โ€” 1).

With these definitions it can be proved that all ideals of the same class have the same total character, and hence there is a distribution of classes into genera, each genus containing those classes for which the total character is the same (cf. ยง 36).

Moreover, we have the fundamental theorem that an assigned set of ๐’“ units ยฑ1 corresponds to an actually existing genus if, and only if, their product is ๏ผ‹1, so that the number of actually existing genera is 2๐’“โ€”1. This is really equivalent to a theorem about quadratic forms first stated and proved by Gauss; the same may be said about the next proposition, which, in its natural order, is easily proved by the method of ideals, whereas Gauss had to employ the theory of ternary quadratics.

Every class of the principal genus is the square of a class.

An ambiguous ideal in ฮฉ is defined as one which is unaltered by the change of โˆš๐‘š to โ€” โˆš๐‘š (that is, it is the same as its conjugate) and not divisible by any rational integer except ยฑ1. The only ambiguous prime ideals in ฮฉ are those which are factors of its discriminant. Putting ๐šซ๏ผ๐”ฎโ‚ยฒ ๐”ฎโ‚‚ยฒ . . . ๐”ฎ๐‘กยฒ, there are in ฮฉ exactly 2๐‘ก ambiguous ideals: namely, those factors of ๐šซ, including ๐”ฌ, which are not divisible by any square. It is a fundamental theorem, first proved by Gauss, that the number of ambiguous classes is equal to the number of genera.

54. Class-Number.โ€”The number of ideal classes in the field ฮฉ(โˆš๐‘š) may be expressed in the following forms:โ€”

(i.) ๐‘š๏ผœ0:

(ii.) ๐‘š๏ผž0:

In the first of these formulae ๐œ is the number of units contained in ฮฉ; thus ๐œ๏ผ6 for ๐šซ๏ผโ€”3, ๐œ๏ผ4 for ๐šซ๏ผโ€”4, ๐œ๏ผ2 in other cases. In the second formula, ๐œ– is the fundamental unit, and the products are taken for all the numbers of the set (1, 2, . . . ๐šซ) for which , respectively. In the ideal theory the only way in which these formulae have been obtained is by a modification of Dirichletโ€™s method; to prove them without the use of transcendental analysis would be a substantial advance in the theory.

55. Suppose that any ideal in ฮฉ is expressed in the form [๐œ”โ‚, ๐œ”โ‚‚]; then any element of it is expressible as ๐‘ฅ๐œ”โ‚๏ผ‹๐‘ฆ๐œ”โ‚‚, where ๐‘ฅ, ๐‘ฆ are rational integers, and we shall have ๐–ญ (๐‘ฅ๐œ”โ‚๏ผ‹๐‘ฆ๐œ”โ‚‚)๏ผ๐’‚๐‘ฅยฒ๏ผ‹๐’ƒ๐‘ฅ๐‘ฆ๏ผ‹๐’„๐‘ฆยฒ, where ๐’‚, ๐’ƒ, ๐’„ are rational numbers contained in the ideal. If we put ๐‘ฅ๏ผ๐›ผ๐‘ฅโ€ฒ๏ผ‹๐›ฝ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ, ๐‘ฆ๏ผ๐›พ๐‘ฅโ€ฒ๏ผ‹๐›ฟ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ, where ๐›ผ, ๐›ฝ, ๐›พ, ๐›ฟ are rational numbers such that ๐›ผ๐›ฟโ€”๐›ฝ๐›พ๏ผยฑ1, we shall have simultaneously (๐’‚, ๐’ƒ, ๐’„) (๐‘ฅ, ๐‘ฆ)ยฒ๏ผ(๐’‚โ€ฒ, ๐’ƒโ€ฒ, ๐’„โ€ฒ) (๐‘ฅโ€ฒ, ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ)ยฒ as in ยง 32 and also

(๐’‚โ€ฒ,๐’ƒโ€ฒ,๐’„โ€ฒ) (๐‘ฅโ€ฒ,๐‘ฆโ€ฒ)ยฒ๏ผ๐–ญ{๐‘ฅโ€ฒ(๐›ผ๐œ”โ‚๏ผ‹๐›พ๐œ”โ‚‚)๏ผ‹๐‘ฆโ€ฒ(๐›ฝ๐œ”โ‚๏ผ‹๐›ฟ๐œ”โ‚‚)}๏ผ๐–ญ(๐‘ฅโ€ฒ๐œ”โ€ฒโ‚๏ผ‹๐‘ฆโ€ฒ๐œ”โ€ฒโ‚‚),


where [๐œ”โ€ฒโ‚,โ€†๐œ”โ€ฒโ‚‚] is the same ideal as before. Thus all equivalent forms are associated with the same ideal, and the numbers representable by forms of a particular class are precisely those which are norms of numbers belonging to the associated ideal. Hence the class-number for ideals in ฮฉ is also the class-number for a set of quadratic forms; and it can be shown that all these forms have the same determinant ๐šซ. Conversely, every class of forms of determinant ๐šซ can be associated with a definite class of ideals in ฮฉ(โˆš๐‘š), where ๐‘š๏ผ๐šซ or 1/4๐šซ as the case may be. Composition of form-classes exactly corresponds to the multiplication of ideals: hence the complete analogy between the two theories, so long as they are really in contact. There is a corresponding theory of forms in connexion with a field of order ๐’: the forms are of the order ๐’, but are only very special forms of that order, because they are algebraically resolvable into the product of linear factors.

56. Complex Quadratic Forms.โ€”Dirichlet, Smith and others, have discussed forms (๐’‚, ๐’ƒ, ๐’„) in which the coefficients are complex integers of the form ๐‘š๏ผ‹๐’๐‘–; and Hermite has considered bilinear forms ๐’‚๐‘ฅ๐‘ฅโ€ฒ๏ผ‹๐’ƒ๐‘ฅ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ๏ผ‹๐’ƒโ€ฒ๐‘ฅโ€ฒ๐‘ฆ๏ผ‹๐’„๐‘ฆ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ, where ๐‘ฅโ€ฒ, ๐‘ฆโ€ฒ, ๐’ƒโ€ฒ are the conjugates of ๐‘ฅ, ๐‘ฆ, ๐’ƒ and ๐’‚, ๐’„, are real. Ultimately these theories are connected with fields of the fourth order; and of course in the same way we might consider forms (๐’‚, ๐’ƒ, ๐’„) with integral coefficients belonging to any given field of order ๐’: the theory would then be ultimately connected with a field of order 2๐’.

57. Kronecker's Method.โ€”In practice it is found convenient to combine the method of Dedekind with that of Kronecker, the main principles of which are as follows. Let ๐–ฅ( ๐‘ฅ, ๐‘ฆ, ๐‘ง, . . .) be a polynomial in any number of indeterminates (umbrae, as Sylvester calls them) with ordinary integral coefficients; if ๐’ is the greatest common measure of the coefficients, we have ๐–ฅ๏ผ๐’๐–ค, where ๐–ค is a primary or unit form. The positive integer ๐’ is called the divisor of ๐–ฅ; and the divisor of the product of two forms is equal to the product of the divisors of the factors. Next suppose that the coefficients of ๐–ฅ are integers in a field ฮฉ of order ๐’. Denoting the conjugate forms by ๐–ฅโ€ฒ, ๐–ฅโ€ณ, . . . ๐–ฅ(๐’๏ผ1), the product ๐–ฅ๐–ฅโ€ฒ๐–ฅโ€ณ . . . ๐–ฅ(๐’๏ผ1)๏ผ๐‘“๐–ค, where ๐‘“ is a real positive integer, and ๐–ค a unit form with real integral coefficients. The natural number ๐‘“ is called the norm of ๐–ฅ. If ๐–ฅ, ๐–ฆ are any two forms (in ฮฉ) we have ๐–ญ(๐–ฅ๐–ฆ)๏ผ๐–ญ(๐–ฅ)๐–ญ(๐–ฆ). Let the coefficients of ๐–ฅ be ๐›ผโ‚, ๐›ผโ‚‚, those of ๐–ฆ ๐›ฝโ‚, ๐›ฝโ‚‚, &c., and those of ๐–ฅ๐–ฆ ๐›พโ‚, ๐›พโ‚‚, &c.; and let ๐”ญ be any prime ideal in ฮฉ. Then if ๐”ญ๐‘š is the highest power of ๐”ญ contained in each of the coefficients ๐›ผ๐‘–, and ๐”ญ๐’ the highest power of ๐”ญ contained in each of the coefficients ๐›ฝ๐‘–, ๐”ญ๐‘š๏ผ‹๐’ is the highest power of ๐”ญ contained by the whole set of coefficients ๐›พ๐‘–. Writing dv(๐›ผโ‚, ๐›ผโ‚‚, . . .) for the highest ideal divisor of ๐›ผโ‚, ๐›ผโ‚‚, &c., this is called the content of ๐–ฅ; and we have the theorem that the