Home Browse by Subject Bestsellers New Titles Editor's Choice New Reviews Textbooks
Search Book Series Study Guides Rights Inspection Copy Contact Us Join Our Mailing List
For Authors How to Order E-Catalogues

Browse all Subjects
Search Bookshop
New Titles
Editor's Choice
Bestsellers
Book Series
Textbooks
Journals
Join Our Mailing List
 
Series in Pure Mathematics - Vol. 2

A SURVEY OF TRACE FORMS OF ALGEBRAIC NUMBER FIELDS

by P E Conner & R Perlis (Louisiana State)

Every finite separable field extension F/K carries a canonical inner product, given by trace(xy). This symmetric K-bilinear form is the trace form of F/K.When F is an algebraic number field and K is the field Q of rational numbers, the trace form goes back at least 100 years to Hermite and Sylvester. These notes present the first systematic treatment of the trace form as an object in its own right. Chapter I discusses the trace form of F/Q up to Witt equivalence in the Witt ring W(Q). Special attention is paid to the Witt classes arising from normal extensions F/Q. Chapter II contains a detailed analysis of trace forms over p-adic fields. These local results are applied in Chapter III to prove that a Witt class X in W(Q) is represented by the trace form of an extension F/Q if and only if X has non-negative signature. Chapter IV discusses integral trace forms, obtained by restricting the trace form of F/Q to the ring of algebraic integers in F. When F/Q is normal, the Galois group acts as a group of isometries of the integral trace form. It is proved that when F/Q is normal of prime degree, the integral form is determined up to equivariant integral equivalence by the discriminant of F alone. Chapter V discusses the equivariant Witt theory of trace forms of normal extensions F/Q and Chapter VI relates the trace form of F/Q to questions of ramification in F. These notes were written in an effort to identify central problems. There are many open problems listed in the text. An introduction to Witt theory is included and illustrative examples are discussed throughout.


Readership: Mathematicians.


"This book is unusual but ultimately quite enjoyable."

William C Waterhouse
Mathematical Review (USA), 1986





"The book is pleasant to read, with timely illustrations of new concepts intermingled with the general theory."

R W K Odoni
Bull. of the London Maths. Soc. (UK), 1987




328pp Pub. date: Jul 1984
ISBN 9971-966-04-2 US$58 / £40
ISBN 9971-966-05-0(pbk) US$32 / £22


Copyright © 2008 World Scientific Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Updated on 18 July 2008