This page is about adjunctions of a set to a field in field theory. For the notion of adjunction in 2-category theory, see adjunction.
symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
If a subset of a field is a subfield, then we call the larger field an extension of the smaller field .
More generally, if is any ring homomorphism between fields, then it must be an injection, so we may treat it as a field extension.
Let be a field, let be a field extension of , and let be a subset of . is also a subset of . Then the adjunction of to , or the field generated by over , is the initial subfield such that and .
Every field extension can be factorized as a purely transcendental extension followed by an algebraic extension. Indeed, by Zorn's lemma, we may construct a transcendence basis (i.e. maximal algebraically independent set) , and the purely transcendental part is the subfield generated by .
Unfortunately, this does not yield an orthogonal factorization system: given a field , we may form the field of rational functions over , which is a purely transcendental extension of , and we may form the algebraic closure , which is an algebraic extension of ; but we have the following commutative diagram,
where is the subfield of generated by , and is algebraic, yet there is no homomorphism making both evident triangles commute.
Last revised on November 6, 2023 at 02:53:33. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.