Itturns out that the algebraic closure is not complete, so we shall consider its completion : This field turns out to be algebraically closed and is a natural domain for the study of "analytic functions."
2004, John Swallow, Exploratory Galois Theory, Cambridge University Press, page 179:
While contains an algebraic closure of , it is by no means the only algebraically closed field containing an algebraic closure of . We denote by the algebraic closure of in ; this field is simply the subfield of consisting of algebraic numbers. The field is isomorphic, then, to any algebraic closure of , but even knowing that it is unique up to isomorphism very likely leaves us no more familiar with than we were.
使用する際の注意点
Notations for the algebraic closure of a field include and .
Using Zorn's lemma (or the weaker ultrafilter lemma), it can be shown that every field has an algebraic closure, and that the algebraic closure of a field K is unique up to an isomorphism that fixes every member of K. Consequently, authors often speak of the (rather than an) algebraic closure of K. (See Algebraic closure on Wikipedia.Wikipedia )
The field of complex numbers, , is the algebraic closure of the field of real numbers, .
The algebraic closure of the field of p-adic numbers, , is denoted or . (Unlike , and indeed unlike , is not metrically complete: its metric completion, which is algebraically closed, is denoted or .)
関連する語
algebraically closed
参照
Frédérique Oggier (2010), “Introduction to Algebraic Number Theory”, in ntu.edu.sg/~frederique/Teaching, archived from the originalon23October 2014