Ideal norm
In commutative algebra, the norm of an ideal is a generalization of a norm of an element in the field extension. It is particularly important in number theory since it measures the size of an ideal of a complicated number ring in terms of an ideal in a less complicated ring. When the less complicated number ring is taken to be the ring of integers, Z, then the norm of a nonzero ideal I of a number ring R is simply the size of the finite quotient ring R/I.
Relative norm
Let A be a Dedekind domain with field of fractions K and integral closure of B in a finite separable extension L of K. (this implies that B is also a Dedekind domain.) Let
and
be the ideal groups of A and B, respectively (i.e., the sets of nonzero fractional ideals.) Following the technique developed by Jean-Pierre Serre, the norm map
is the unique group homomorphism that satisfies
for all nonzero prime ideals
of B, where
is the prime ideal of A lying below
.
Alternatively, for any
one can equivalently define
to be the fractional ideal of A generated by the set
of field norms of elements of B.[1]
For
, one has
, where
. The ideal norm of a principal ideal is thus compatible with the field norm of an element:
[2]
Let
be a Galois extension of number fields with rings of integers
. Then the preceding applies with
, and for any
we have
which is an element of
. The notation
is sometimes shortened to
, an abuse of notation that is compatible with also writing
for the field norm, as noted above.
In the case
, it is reasonable to use positive rational numbers as the range for
since
has trivial ideal class group and unit group
, thus each nonzero fractional ideal of
is generated by a uniquely determined positive rational number.
Under this convention the relative norm from
down to
coincides with the absolute norm defined below.
Absolute norm
Let
be a number field with ring of integers
, and
a nonzero (integral) ideal of
.
The absolute norm of
is
By convention, the norm of the zero ideal is taken to be zero.
If
is a principal ideal, then
.[3]
The norm is completely multiplicative: if
and
are ideals of
, then
.[3] Thus the absolute norm extends uniquely to a group homomorphism
defined for all nonzero fractional ideals of
.
The norm of an ideal
can be used to give an upper bound on the field norm of the smallest nonzero element it contains: there always exists a nonzero
for which
where
is the discriminant of
and
is the number of pairs of (non-real) complex embeddings of L into
(the number of complex places of L).[4]
See also
References
- ↑ Janusz, Gerald J. (1996), Algebraic number fields, Graduate Studies in Mathematics 7 (second ed.), Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society, Proposition I.8.2, ISBN 0-8218-0429-4, MR 1362545 (96j:11137)
- ↑ Serre, Jean-Pierre (1979), Local fields, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 67, Translated from the French by Marvin Jay Greenberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1.5, Proposition 14, ISBN 0-387-90424-7, MR 554237 (82e:12016)
- 1 2 Marcus, Daniel A. (1977), Number fields, Universitext, New York: Springer-Verlag, Theorem 22c, ISBN 0-387-90279-1, MR 0457396 (56 #15601)
- ↑ Neukirch, Jürgen (1999), Algebraic number theory, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, Lemma 6.2, ISBN 3-540-65399-6, MR 1697859 (2000m:11104)

![N_{B/A}(\mathfrak q) = \mathfrak{p}^{[B/\mathfrak q : A/\mathfrak p]}](../I/m/96393a0fd100a9e74d01ab6ec27485bd.png)

![N(\mathfrak a) :=\left [ \mathcal{O}_L: \mathfrak a\right ]=\left|\mathcal{O}_L/\mathfrak a\right|.\,](../I/m/35c0ee6c659726ec635c0548bd8c7472.png)

