Galois theory of rings
A generalization of the results of the theory of Galois fields (cf. Galois theory and Galois group) to the case of associative rings with a unit element. Let be an associative ring with a unit element, let
be some subgroup of the group of all automorphisms of
, let
be a subgroup of
, let
![]() |
and let . The set
will then be a subring of
. Let
be a subring of
. One says that an automorphism
of
leaves
invariant elementwise if
for all
. The set of all such automorphisms is denoted by
. Let
![]() |
The principal subject of the Galois theory of rings are the correspondences:
1) ;
2) ;
3) . Unlike the Galois theory of fields, (even when the group
is finite) the equality
is not always valid, while the correspondences 1), 2) and 1), 3) need not be mutually inverse. It is of interest, accordingly, to single out families of subrings and families of subgroups for which the analogue of the theorem on Galois correspondence is valid. This problem has found a positive solution in two cases. The first one involves the requirements of "proximity" between the properties of the ring
and the properties of a field (e.g.
is a skew-field or a complete ring of linear transformations of a vector space over a skew-field); the second is the requirement of "proximity" between the structure of the ring
over a subring
to the structure of the corresponding pair if
is a field (e.g. the
-module is projective).
Let be an invertible element of the ring
, let
be the automorphism of
defined by
,
, and let
be the subalgebra of
generated by the invertible elements
for which
. The group
is called an
-group if
for all invertible
. If
is a skew-field, if
is a sub-skew-field of it, if
, and if
is a finite-dimensional left vector space over
, then the Galois correspondences
and
are mutually inverse, where
belongs to the set of all
-subgroups of the group
and
to the set of all skew-fields of the sub-skew-field
containing
.
A similar result is also valid if is a complete ring of linear transformations (but the corresponding system of conditions singling out the families of subgroups and families of subrings is formulated in a somewhat more complicated manner).
Further, let be a commutative ring without non-trivial idempotents and let
. The ring
is called a finite normal extension of a ring
if
and
is a finitely-generated
-module. The ring
may be considered to be an
-module by assuming
![]() |
where . The ring
is called a separable
-algebra if
is a projective
-module. If
is a finite normal separable extension of the ring
, then
is a finitely-generated projective
-module, the group
is finite
and the mappings
,
define mutually-inverse relations between the set of all subgroups of the group
and the set of all separable
-subalgebras of the algebra
.
Any ring has a separable closure, which is an analogue of the separable closure of a field. The group of all automorphisms of this closure which leave
invariant elementwise is, in the general case, a profinite group. The correspondences 1) and 2) are mutually inverse on the set of all closed subgroups of the resulting group and on the set of all separable
-subalgebras of the separable closure of the ring
.
Similar results are also valid if the ring contains non-trivial idempotents. However, this involves substantial changes in a number of basic concepts. For instance, the role of the Galois group
is taken over by the fundamental groupoid.
References
[1] | N. Jacobson, "Structure of rings" , Amer. Math. Soc. (1956) |
[2] | S.U. Chase, M.E. Swedler, "Hopf algebras and Galois theory" , Springer (1969) |
[3] | F. de Meyer, E. Ingraham, "Separable algebras over commutative rings" , Lect. notes in math. , 181 , Springer (1971) |
[4] | A.R. Magid, "The separable Galois theory of commutative rings" , M. Dekker (1974) |
Comments
References
[a1] | S.U. Chase, D.K. Harrison, A. Rosenberg, "Galois theory and Galois cohomology of commutative rings" , Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. , 52 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1965) |
Galois theory of rings. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Galois_theory_of_rings&oldid=18902