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The cyclotomic polynomials $\Phi_n$ have Galois group $(\mathbb Z/n\mathbb Z)^\times$.

What other families of polynomials are there with known Galois groups like this?

Gerry Myerson
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quanta
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    The Galois group of cyclotomic fields is not cyclic, in general. – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez May 01 '11 at 21:20
  • @Mariano, thank you! That was a really silly mistake! – quanta May 01 '11 at 21:25
  • @Dinesh, Is it okay now? – quanta May 01 '11 at 22:09
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    @quanta: "What are some other families of polynomials with known Galois groups?" (add a verb, and you can remove "like this" without changing the meaning) – Jack Schmidt May 02 '11 at 00:07
  • Didn't somebody have a generic polynomials answer at some point? Maybe an example for cyclic groups. I queued it for reading, but now it is gone. – Jack Schmidt May 02 '11 at 00:09
  • @Jack: I did. I had a thinko and said that a generic polynomial gives the same Galois group for any choice of specialization (i.e. inputs for $t_i$), which is clearly false (otherwise, how would $x^n+t_{1}x^{n-1}+\cdots+t_n$ be a generic polynomial for $S_n$?). I felt that a generic polynomial for a group $G$ would therefore not answer quanta's question, as it doesn't really produce an explicit family of polynomials having Galois group $G$. – Zev Chonoles May 02 '11 at 00:48
  • @Zev: Thanks. Do "most" specializations have the right Galois group? Maybe "most" means "dense in some Zariski topology" or just "infinitely many when K is infinite". – Jack Schmidt May 02 '11 at 01:09
  • @Jack, "Most" polynomials of degree $n$ have Galois group $S_n$, where it is possible to give a precise meaning to "most". But I don't think this observation is relevant to quanta's question. – Gerry Myerson May 02 '11 at 02:51
  • @Gerry, I meant in general for the generic polynomials. For instance, your answer is of this form (so I think it is relevant). For each particular n, x^n - Y is a generic polynomial, but if n and the specialization of Y interact, then the Galois group can change. However, the list of bad Y is easy to write down, if I recall correctly. – Jack Schmidt May 02 '11 at 17:03
  • @quanta Yes.Thanks – Dinesh May 02 '11 at 17:55
  • @Jack, OK, I understand you now. I'd guess the answer is yes, but that's a wild guess, not an educated one. – Gerry Myerson May 03 '11 at 00:41

4 Answers4

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Your question is esssentially the starting point of the inverse Galois problem (over $\mathbb{Q}$): given a finite group $G$, construct an extension (or a family of extensions) of $\mathbb{Q}$ with this Galois group or prove that no such extension exists. In this generality, i.e. for arbitrary groups, this is still an open problem. There are many variants, e.g. changing the base field, or imposing conditions on the ramification in the extension. If you google for the inverse Galois problem, you find lots of literature on concrete families of groups.

Here is an extremely useful result in Inverse Galois theory:

Theorem (Hilbert): Let $\mathbb{Q}(T)$ be the function field in one variable over $\mathbb{Q}$ and let $f(T,X)\in\mathbb{Q}(T)[X]$ be an irreducible polynomial over this field. If the splitting field of $f$ has Galois group $G$, then there exist infinitely many $b\in \mathbb{Q}$ such that the splitting field of $f(b,X)$ over $\mathbb{Q}$ has Galois group $G$.

However, this result is non-constructive, i.e. it doesn't tell you where to find suitable $b$, so doesn't quite answer your question. But it does tell you that infinitely many polynomials with a certain Galois group exist, provided you can realise that Galois group over the function field.

For concrete families, here are some examples, that haven't been mentioned so far:

  • If you google for papers of Jensen, Yui and collaborators, you will see several papers on parametric families of polynomials with dihedral Galois groups, or more generally with certain Frobenius Galois groups.

  • Starting with elliptic curves over $\mathbb{Q}$ without complex multiplication and adjoining their $p$-torsion can give you Galois groups $\text{GL}_2(\mathbb{F}_p)$. In principle, you can write down parametric families of the corresponding polynomials for any fixed $p$ by writing down parametric families of elliptic curves with surjective image of Galois on $\text{Aut}(E[p])$, and by writing down their $p$-division polynomials, but it is going to be a lot of work.

  • Adjoining torsion points of higher-dimensional abelian varieties, you can get other interesting matrix groups. Again, googling something like "l-adic image Galois abelian variety" will give lots of examples.

There is also active research on the question: if $G$ is an extension of $N$ by $H$ and you managed to realise $N$ as a Galois extension of $\mathbb{Q}$ and $H$ as a Galois extension of a bigger field, can you realise $G$ as a Galois extension of $\mathbb{Q}$? Google "extension problem".

Alex B.
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Here is one family of polynomials, the Rikuna polynomials, I happen to have studied this past summer at an REU. The main result about Rikuna polynomials is:

Let $\ell$ be an odd prime. Let $K$ be a field whose characteristic does not divide $\ell$. Let $\zeta$ be a primitve $\ell$-th root of unity in some field containing $K$. We assume that $\zeta+\zeta^{-1}\in K$ but $\zeta\notin K$. Define $$p=\frac{\zeta^{-1}(x-\zeta)^\ell - \zeta(x-\zeta^{-1})^\ell}{\zeta^{-1}-\zeta}, \hskip0.5in q = \frac{(x-\zeta)^\ell -(x-\zeta^{-1})^\ell}{\zeta^{-1}-\zeta}.$$ Then $r=p-Tq\in K(T)[x]$ has Galois group $\mathbb{Z}/\ell\mathbb{Z}$ over $K(T)$.

Zev Chonoles
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  • So the coefficients of $r$ involve $\zeta$, but $\zeta$ may not be in $K$, so $r$ isn't really in $K(T)[x]$, is it? – Gerry Myerson May 02 '11 at 02:55
  • @Gerry: Whoops, I meant to assume $\zeta+\zeta^{-1}\in K$ but $\zeta\notin K$ (and now that that's corrected, it's clear $r\in K(T)[x]$ because it's invariant under $\zeta\mapsto\zeta^{-1}$). – Zev Chonoles May 02 '11 at 03:51
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Here's a general theorem, which might be what you're looking for: If $f$ is an irreducible rational polynomial of prime degree $p$ with exactly two non-real roots, then the Galois group of $f$ is the full symmetric group $S_p$.

lhf
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You should be able to work out the group of $x^n-2$ for all $n$ (or, more generally, the group of $x^n-a$, with some mild restrictions on how the integers $n$ and $a$ relate).

Gerry Myerson
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  • If I read that right, Kummer theory only applies when the ground field has $n$th roots of unity, so it's only part of the story for, say, $x^n-2$ over the rationals. I'm just trying to encourage quanta to look at this case. I think one can handle it by brute force, without appeal to notions beyond the basics. – Gerry Myerson May 02 '11 at 05:07