Steinitz's theorem (field theory)

In field theory, Steinitz's theorem states that a finite extension of fields is simple if and only if there are only finitely many intermediate fields between and .

Proof edit

Suppose first that   is simple, that is to say   for some  . Let   be any intermediate field between   and  , and let   be the minimal polynomial of   over  . Let   be the field extension of   generated by all the coefficients of  . Then   by definition of the minimal polynomial, but the degree of   over   is (like that of   over  ) simply the degree of  . Therefore, by multiplicativity of degree,   and hence  .

But if   is the minimal polynomial of   over  , then  , and since there are only finitely many divisors of  , the first direction follows.

Conversely, if the number of intermediate fields between   and   is finite, we distinguish two cases:

  1. If   is finite, then so is  , and any primitive root of   will generate the field extension.
  2. If   is infinite, then each intermediate field between   and   is a proper  -subspace of  , and their union can't be all of  . Thus any element outside this union will generate  .[1]

History edit

This theorem was found and proven in 1910 by Ernst Steinitz.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Lemma 9.19.1 (Primitive element), The Stacks project. Accessed on line July 19, 2023.
  2. ^ Steinitz, Ernst (1910). "Algebraische Theorie der Körper". Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (in German). 1910 (137): 167–309. doi:10.1515/crll.1910.137.167. ISSN 1435-5345. S2CID 120807300.