Questions tagged [abstract-algebra]

For questions about monoids, groups, rings, modules, fields, vector spaces, algebras over fields, various types of lattices, and other such algebraic objects. Associate with related tags like [group-theory], [ring-theory], [modules], etc. as necessary to clarify which topic of abstract algebra is most related to your question and help other users when searching.

Abstract algebra is the study of algebraic objects, i.e. sets endowed with one or more operations on the elements of those sets. In particular, the study of abstract algebra considers the algebraic structures and properties of which such operations induce. It can be considered as the generalization of the study of the algebraic structure of the integers and real numbers (arithmetic), or the study of matrices and vector spaces (linear algebra).

Some algebraic objects are monoids, groups, rings, fields, vector spaces, modules, algebras, and categories, among many other less prominent objects.

Examples

  1. The set of non-negative integers $\mathbb{N} = \{0,1,2,3,\dotsc\}$ is a monoid under the operation $+$.

  2. The integers $\mathbb{Z} = \{\dotsc,-1,0,1,\dotsc\}$ under the binary operation of $+$ form a group.

  3. Furthermore, $\mathbb{Z}$ has the structure of a ring when you consider it as being equipped with both addition and multiplication.

  4. The real numbers $\mathbb{R}$ with their usual addition and multiplication form a field.

  5. The set of $n\times n$ matrices with entries in $\mathbb{R}$ with matrix addition and multiplication form a ring.

  6. The set of $1\times n$ vectors over the real numbers, with vector addition, and multiplication by elements of the $n\times n$ real matrices on the right are an example of a module for the ring of matrices.

In addition to studying the objects themselves, abstract algebra considers homomorphisms between the objects and various constructions and tools, which are useful for studying the objects.

85022 questions
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Galois group for $x^6-7x^2+7$

What is the galois group for $x^6-7x^2+7$? My approach: first consider $x^3-7x+7$, it is irreducible by Esenstein, and its discriminant is a square, hence the galois group for this polynomial is$A_3$, and the splitting field for it is$Q(x_1)$ where…
Gogwaben
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An expression that vanishes over every field

In this question, Jack Schmidt asks to prove a certain identity for $2\times 2$ matrices A and B. In fact he asks to show that tr(AABABB−AABBAB) = 0. In an answer by user7406, he shows that 3 times this expression must be 0, solving the problem at…
Myself
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UFD containg a special element

Does anyone know an example of a unique factorization domain $R$ that is (i) not a Dedekind domain (or equivalently, not a principal ideal domain) and (ii) contains some irreducible element $r \in R$ such that the quotient $R/rR$ is finite? I am…
Algebrus
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What is an automorphism group?

I'm studying field theory on my own, and I am stuck in the definition of an automorphism and automorphism group. Could you give me examples, like the $Aut(\mathbb Z_7)$? How they are computed?
dot dot
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Abelian groups axioms with minus in place of plus

An abelian group is a set equipped with a binary operation $+$, a unary operation $-$ and a nullary operation (constant) $0$, satisfying certain axioms (associativity, unity, etc). I wonder if it is possible to describe the same structure, that is…
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Is an ideal also a normal subgroup?

The book I have first goes over group theory. Once it gets to rings and starts discussing subrings along with cosets and factor rings it leaves out some details for brevity and to not repeat what has already been said in the group theory portion.…
user172428
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Irreducible in $\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}]$

How can I prove that $2+\sqrt{-5}$ is irreducible in $\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}]$? I tried to show by $2+\sqrt{-5}=(a+b\sqrt{-5})(c+d\sqrt{-5})$ but I could not get a contradiction.
user20353
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$\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}$ has a unique subgroup of order $n$ for any positive integer $n$?

Viewing $\mathbb{Z}$ and $\mathbb{Q}$ as additive groups, I have an idea to show that $\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}$ has a unique subgroup of order $n$ for any positive integer $n$. You can take $a/n+\mathbb{Z}$ where $(a,n)=1$, and this element has order…
nere
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On a proof of the basis for the Weyl algebra

The Weyl algebra is $$ A=k\langle x,y\rangle/\langle yx-xy-1\rangle $$ where $k$ is a field, $k\langle x,y\rangle$ is the free algebra, and $yx-xy-1$ is the defining relation. A basis for $A$ is $\{ x^i y^j|i,j\geq0\}$. What I am concerned about…
user14242
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free $R$-algebras: when does $R\langle X\rangle\cong\!R\langle Y\rangle$ $\Rightarrow$ $|X|\!=\!|Y|$ hold?

An analogous question regarding free groups can be found here. INTUITION: A free $R$-algebra on indeterminates $X_1,\ldots,X_n$ is the noncommutative analogue of the polynomial ring $R[X_1,\ldots,X_n]$, which is a free commutative $R$-algebra on…
Leo
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Is the product of ideals commutative?

My algebra book introduces sum, intersection and product of ideals (in non-commutative rings), and then says that all three operations are commutative and associative, without proof. I see no reasons why the product of ideals should be commutative,…
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$ (\mathbb{Z} \times \mathbb{Z}) / \langle (a, b ) \rangle$ is isomorphic to $ \mathbb{Z} \times \mathbb{Z} _d $, where $ d = \gcd(a,b)$

$ \frac{\mathbb{Z} \times \mathbb{Z}}{\langle (a, b ) \rangle}$ is isomorphic to $ \mathbb{Z} \times \mathbb{Z} _d $, where $ d = \gcd(a,b)$. Here, $\langle (a, b ) \rangle$ is a group generated by $ ( a, b) \in \mathbb{Z} \times \mathbb{Z}$ . I…
user73309
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Free module implies projective module

Definiton : Let $M$ be an $A$-module. Then $M$ is projective if there exists an $A$-module $N$ such that $M \oplus N$ is free. Prop: If $M$ is free then $M$ is projective. Can we simply take the trivial module $\{0\}$ then $M \oplus \{0\} \cong M$…
user9467
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Why is the set of integers modulo 3 a field? Also why is integers modulo prime a field?

To be a field, there are certain properties that the set has to satisfy. But the set of integers doesn't have a multiplicative inverse, so how can it constitute a field?
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Associativity, commutativity and distributivity of modulo arithmetic

Textbooks usually state "it is not hard to check that in modular arithmetic the usual associative, commutative and distributive properties continue to apply". Is there a way other than tedious proof by case analysis? For example, perhaps it is more…