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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Solve $abxcd = y$ for $x$ in a group.

Solve $abxcd = y$ for $x$ in a group. I just used the inverses of a,b,c,d and multiplying on both sides to get $x = b^{-1}a^{-1}yd^{-1}c^{-1}$ is this correct , or close to it? If not, whats wrong and how is it fixed.
Achilles
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Definition of "algebra of sets"

Can I use the following definition? Def.. let be $A$ a set and $B \in \mathscr{P}(\mathscr{P}(A))$, $(A,B)$ is algebra of sets if $\emptyset \in B$ $\forall X \in B( (A-X) \in B)$ $\forall X,Y \in B((X \cap Y ) \in B)$ It is correct? Thanks in…
mle
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Isomorphism of quaternion algebra

I'm reading Central Simple Algebras and Galois Cohomology by Gille and Szamuely. I am stuck on this line in one of the proof. $k$ is a field. A quaternion algebra is called split if it is isomorphic to $M_{2}(k)$ as a $k$-algebra. This is the…
TheNumber23
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How are these two sentences equivalent?

How are these two sentences equivalent? Let $f(x)\in\mathbb{Z}[x]$ be a polynomial such that it is the multiplication of two polynomials with rational coefficients. Then $f(x)$ is also the multiplication of two polynomials with integer…
Mill
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Explain why if $u=\sqrt{i+2}$ is in $\mathbb{Q}(i)$, an extension of the rational numbers, there exists b...

Explain why if $u=\sqrt{i+2}$ is in $\mathbb{Q}(i)$, an extension of the rational numbers, there exists $b \in \mathbb{Q}(i)$ which is a root of $a(x)=-1+8x^2+4x^4$. I have looked at the minimum polynomial for $u$, and I can easily show why $u$ is…
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could we also calculate the number of permutations we have to do,to get the matrix $I$?

I am given the matrix $$B= \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 0 &0 & 1\\ 0& 0 & 1 &0 \\ 1 &0 &0 &0 \\ 0 & 1 & 0 & 0 \end{pmatrix}$$ and I want to find its order. So, I have to find the minimum $n \in \mathbb{N}$ such that $B^n=I$. Instead of this way,could…
evinda
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The group $G$ is a partition of equivalence classes

I am looking at the proof of the Lagrange Theorem: Let $G$ a finite group and $H$ a subgroup of G. Then $|H| \mid |G|$. If $g \in G$, then $|gH|=|H|$. If $g_1, g_2 \in G$ we consider $g_1H$ and $g_2H$. To continue we show that $$g_1H \cap…
evinda
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The Fundamental Homomorphism Theorem

The Fundamental Homomorphism Theorem states that: Let R, R' be rings, ϕ : R → R' a homomorphism. Then with K = kerϕ, there is an isomorphism between R/K and ϕ(R). However in some example questions i have seen, they prove that the function is not…
cf12418
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Existence of a field with $p^2$ elements

Let $F$=$\mathbb{Z}/p\mathbb{Z}$ where $p \in \mathbb{Z}$ is prime I need to show there is a field with $p^2$ elements. I am not sure where to start with this.
cf12418
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Prove that $f([r],[s])=[r+s], g([r],[s])=[r \cdot s]$ are well-defined functions

How can I prove that $f,g : \mathbb{Z}/(m)\times\mathbb{Z}/(m)\rightarrow\mathbb{Z}/(m)$ defined as $f([r],[s])=[r+s], g([r],[s])=[r \cdot s]$ are well defined functions? What I'm reasoning is that if we pick two representatives of the same classes,…
Allonsy
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Group commute properties

Let $G$ be a group If $y\in G$ commutes with some $x\in G$ then $y$ commutes with powers of $x$ i.e $yx^n =x^ny$. I know this is true but is the other way around true? If $y\in G$ commutes with a power of some $x\in G$ say $x^n$ then $y$ commutes…
abe
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Star-continuity of a partially ordered, idempotent semiring implies Kleene Algebra?

I've been looking into Kleene algebras for an upcoming presentation I'm giving on regular expressions. I've read that (in an idempotent semiring with partial order $a\le b \iff a+b=b$) star-continuity, i.e. $$xy*z = \sup(\underset{0\le i\le…
wil
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Understanding a proof of $R$ domain $\Rightarrow R[x]$ domain (Gauss's Lemma)

Theorem: If $R$ is an integral domain, then $R[x]$ is an integral domain as well. Proof: Let $f(x)=a_0+a_1x+a_2x^2+\cdots+a_nx^n$ and $g(x)=b_0+b_1x+b_2x^2+\cdots+b_mx^m$ be two elements of $R[x]$. Let $0\leq i\leq n$ and $0\leq j\leq m$ such that…
Mill
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Converse of CRT for commutative rings.

Im struggling to prove that if the function $\phi: R \to R/I \times R/J$ given by $\phi(x)=(x+I,x+J)$ is surjective then we have $R = I + J$. ($R$ is a commutative ring and $I$ and $J$ are ideals). I have proved that if $R=I+J$ then the map must be…
Loi
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Are $\mathbb Q$ and $\overline{\mathbb Q}$ isomorphic as abelian groups?

Both additive groups have the same cardinality and are divisible. Thus, my initial guess would be that they are isomorphic as abelian groups. But I'm not sure how to prove this. They have different dimensions as vector spaces over $\mathbb Q$, so I…
Nishant
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