In algebraic number theory, the conductor of a finite abelian extension of local or global fields provides a quantitative measure of the ramification in the extension. The definition of the conductor is related to the Artin map.
Local conductor
editLet L/K be a finite abelian extension of non-archimedean local fields. The conductor of L/K, denoted , is the smallest non-negative integer n such that the higher unit group
is contained in NL/K(L×), where NL/K is field norm map and is the maximal ideal of K.[1] Equivalently, n is the smallest integer such that the local Artin map is trivial on . Sometimes, the conductor is defined as where n is as above.[2]
The conductor of an extension measures the ramification. Qualitatively, the extension is unramified if, and only if, the conductor is zero,[3] and it is tamely ramified if, and only if, the conductor is 1.[4] More precisely, the conductor computes the non-triviality of higher ramification groups: if s is the largest integer for which the "lower numbering" higher ramification group Gs is non-trivial, then , where ηL/K is the function that translates from "lower numbering" to "upper numbering" of higher ramification groups.[5]
The conductor of L/K is also related to the Artin conductors of characters of the Galois group Gal(L/K). Specifically,[6]
where χ varies over all multiplicative complex characters of Gal(L/K), is the Artin conductor of χ, and lcm is the least common multiple.
More general fields
editThe conductor can be defined in the same way for L/K a not necessarily abelian finite Galois extension of local fields.[7] However, it only depends on Lab/K, the maximal abelian extension of K in L, because of the "norm limitation theorem", which states that, in this situation,[8][9]
Additionally, the conductor can be defined when L and K are allowed to be slightly more general than local, namely if they are complete valued fields with quasi-finite residue field.[10]
Archimedean fields
editMostly for the sake of global conductors, the conductor of the trivial extension R/R is defined to be 0, and the conductor of the extension C/R is defined to be 1.[11]
Global conductor
editAlgebraic number fields
editThe conductor of an abelian extension L/K of number fields can be defined, similarly to the local case, using the Artin map. Specifically, let θ : Im → Gal(L/K) be the global Artin map where the modulus m is a defining modulus for L/K; we say that Artin reciprocity holds for m if θ factors through the ray class group modulo m. We define the conductor of L/K, denoted , to be the highest common factor of all moduli for which reciprocity holds; in fact reciprocity holds for , so it is the smallest such modulus.[12][13][14]
Example
edit- Taking as base the field of rational numbers, the Kronecker–Weber theorem states that an algebraic number field K is abelian over Q if and only if it is a subfield of a cyclotomic field , where denotes a primitive nth root of unity.[15] If n is the smallest integer for which this holds, the conductor of K is then n if K is fixed by complex conjugation and otherwise.
- Let L/K be where d is a squarefree integer. Then,[16]
- where is the discriminant of .
Relation to local conductors and ramification
editThe global conductor is the product of local conductors:[17]
As a consequence, a finite prime is ramified in L/K if, and only if, it divides .[18] An infinite prime v occurs in the conductor if, and only if, v is real and becomes complex in L.
Notes
edit- ^ Serre 1967, §4.2
- ^ As in Neukirch 1999, definition V.1.6
- ^ Neukirch 1999, proposition V.1.7
- ^ Milne 2008, I.1.9
- ^ Serre 1967, §4.2, proposition 1
- ^ Artin & Tate 2009, corollary to theorem XI.14, p. 100
- ^ As in Serre 1967, §4.2
- ^ Serre 1967, §2.5, proposition 4
- ^ Milne 2008, theorem III.3.5
- ^ As in Artin & Tate 2009, §XI.4. This is the situation in which the formalism of local class field theory works.
- ^ Cohen 2000, definition 3.4.1
- ^ Milne 2008, remark V.3.8
- ^ Janusz 1973, pp. 158, 168–169
- ^ Some authors omit infinite places from the conductor, e.g. Neukirch 1999, §VI.6
- ^ Manin, Yu. I.; Panchishkin, A. A. (2007). Introduction to Modern Number Theory. Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences. Vol. 49 (Second ed.). pp. 155, 168. ISBN 978-3-540-20364-3. ISSN 0938-0396. Zbl 1079.11002.
- ^ Milne 2008, example V.3.11
- ^ For the finite part Neukirch 1999, proposition VI.6.5, and for the infinite part Cohen 2000, definition 3.4.1
- ^ Neukirch 1999, corollary VI.6.6
References
edit- Artin, Emil; Tate, John (2009) [1967], Class field theory, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-4426-7, MR 2467155
- Cohen, Henri (2000), Advanced topics in computational number theory, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 193, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-98727-9
- Janusz, Gerald (1973), Algebraic Number Fields, Pure and Applied Mathematics, vol. 55, Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-380250-4, Zbl 0307.12001
- Milne, James (2008), Class field theory (v4.0 ed.), retrieved 2010-02-22
- Neukirch, Jürgen (1999). Algebraische Zahlentheorie. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften. Vol. 322. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-65399-8. MR 1697859. Zbl 0956.11021.
- Serre, Jean-Pierre (1967), "Local class field theory", in Cassels, J. W. S.; Fröhlich, Albrecht (eds.), Algebraic Number Theory, Proceedings of an instructional conference at the University of Sussex, Brighton, 1965, London: Academic Press, ISBN 0-12-163251-2, MR 0220701