Computing the Galois group of polynomials $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$












9














I have some problems with this exercise. I don't know if it can be done.
Consider the polynomial $ x^n - a in mathbb{Q} $ Can I compute the Galois group of this over $mathbb{Q}$? Maybe having a nice "basis.



The splitting field is given by $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n,alpha)$ , where $zeta_n$ is a primitive root of unity , and $alpha$ is some number such that $alpha^n = a $.
Well first of all, I want a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different (in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple).



For example one easy case, it's when $a>0$, then $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} in mathbb{R}$ , so clearly the minimal polynomial of $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} , zeta_n$ are distincs, and I'm done. If $n$ is odd then , it's also easy, since one root it's also real, for example $x^3-3 $, the real root is $
root 3 of { - 3} = - root 3 of 3
$ , so I can consider the splitting field as $mathbb{Q}(-root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )=mathbb{Q}(root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )$.
The difficult case is when $n$ is even and $a<0$ , for example $x^8+20$ or $x^4+20$ in some cases as in the second, there are particular cases since there exist algorithms for the Galois group of quartics, but in general. It can be done?



$underline{Remark}$ I'm searching a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different since in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple.










share|cite|improve this question


















  • 1




    Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
    – Fly by Night
    Sep 29 '12 at 20:38
















9














I have some problems with this exercise. I don't know if it can be done.
Consider the polynomial $ x^n - a in mathbb{Q} $ Can I compute the Galois group of this over $mathbb{Q}$? Maybe having a nice "basis.



The splitting field is given by $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n,alpha)$ , where $zeta_n$ is a primitive root of unity , and $alpha$ is some number such that $alpha^n = a $.
Well first of all, I want a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different (in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple).



For example one easy case, it's when $a>0$, then $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} in mathbb{R}$ , so clearly the minimal polynomial of $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} , zeta_n$ are distincs, and I'm done. If $n$ is odd then , it's also easy, since one root it's also real, for example $x^3-3 $, the real root is $
root 3 of { - 3} = - root 3 of 3
$ , so I can consider the splitting field as $mathbb{Q}(-root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )=mathbb{Q}(root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )$.
The difficult case is when $n$ is even and $a<0$ , for example $x^8+20$ or $x^4+20$ in some cases as in the second, there are particular cases since there exist algorithms for the Galois group of quartics, but in general. It can be done?



$underline{Remark}$ I'm searching a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different since in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple.










share|cite|improve this question


















  • 1




    Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
    – Fly by Night
    Sep 29 '12 at 20:38














9












9








9


9





I have some problems with this exercise. I don't know if it can be done.
Consider the polynomial $ x^n - a in mathbb{Q} $ Can I compute the Galois group of this over $mathbb{Q}$? Maybe having a nice "basis.



The splitting field is given by $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n,alpha)$ , where $zeta_n$ is a primitive root of unity , and $alpha$ is some number such that $alpha^n = a $.
Well first of all, I want a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different (in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple).



For example one easy case, it's when $a>0$, then $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} in mathbb{R}$ , so clearly the minimal polynomial of $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} , zeta_n$ are distincs, and I'm done. If $n$ is odd then , it's also easy, since one root it's also real, for example $x^3-3 $, the real root is $
root 3 of { - 3} = - root 3 of 3
$ , so I can consider the splitting field as $mathbb{Q}(-root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )=mathbb{Q}(root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )$.
The difficult case is when $n$ is even and $a<0$ , for example $x^8+20$ or $x^4+20$ in some cases as in the second, there are particular cases since there exist algorithms for the Galois group of quartics, but in general. It can be done?



$underline{Remark}$ I'm searching a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different since in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple.










share|cite|improve this question













I have some problems with this exercise. I don't know if it can be done.
Consider the polynomial $ x^n - a in mathbb{Q} $ Can I compute the Galois group of this over $mathbb{Q}$? Maybe having a nice "basis.



The splitting field is given by $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n,alpha)$ , where $zeta_n$ is a primitive root of unity , and $alpha$ is some number such that $alpha^n = a $.
Well first of all, I want a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different (in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple).



For example one easy case, it's when $a>0$, then $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} in mathbb{R}$ , so clearly the minimal polynomial of $(a)^{frac{1}{n}} , zeta_n$ are distincs, and I'm done. If $n$ is odd then , it's also easy, since one root it's also real, for example $x^3-3 $, the real root is $
root 3 of { - 3} = - root 3 of 3
$ , so I can consider the splitting field as $mathbb{Q}(-root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )=mathbb{Q}(root 3 of 3 , zeta_3 )$.
The difficult case is when $n$ is even and $a<0$ , for example $x^8+20$ or $x^4+20$ in some cases as in the second, there are particular cases since there exist algorithms for the Galois group of quartics, but in general. It can be done?



$underline{Remark}$ I'm searching a $underline{"good basis"}$ for the splitting field.
In the sense that the minimal polynomials, of the adjoined elements, are different since in this case the computation of the galois group is very simple.







galois-theory






share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Sep 29 '12 at 20:25









AndyAndy

6024




6024








  • 1




    Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
    – Fly by Night
    Sep 29 '12 at 20:38














  • 1




    Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
    – Fly by Night
    Sep 29 '12 at 20:38








1




1




Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
– Fly by Night
Sep 29 '12 at 20:38




Do you mean the polynmial $x^n-a in mathbb{Q}[x]$? If not then your "polynomial" is a fixed number.
– Fly by Night
Sep 29 '12 at 20:38










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















1














The minimal polynomial of $zeta_n$ and $sqrt[n]a$ are almost always different. In fact, every root in $mathbb C$ of the $n$th cyclotomic polynomial has absolute value $1$, whereas $sqrt[n]a$ usually has not.
The only exceptions are $a=1$ and $a=-1$.
For $a=1$, the splitting field is simply $mathbb Q[zeta_n]$.
For $a=-1$, a solution to $x^n+1=0$ is also a solution to $x^{2n}-1=0$, hence the splitting field is simple $mathbb Q[zeta_{2n}]$.






share|cite|improve this answer





























    9














    Let $K=mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$ and $L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. Then the splitting field
    of $X^n-a$ is given by $F=KL$ and has degree
    $$
    [F:mathbb{Q}]=[KL:mathbb{Q}]=frac{[K:mathbb{Q}][L:mathbb{Q}]}{[Kcap L:mathbb{Q}]}=frac{phi(n)n}{2^s},
    $$

    where $sge 0$ satisfies $2^smid phi(n)$ and $Kcap L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[2^s]{a})$.
    So the point is that we need to determine the intersection $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)cap mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. This intersection is often not just $mathbb{Q}$; note for example that $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1 bmod 4$. A complete answer for this (and the whole question)
    has been published by Jacobson and Velez in "The Galois group of a radical extension of the rationals", in 1990.
    Let $G$ be the Galois group of $X^n-a$. It is obvious that $G$ embedds naturally into the semidirect product of the Galois group $(mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ of $X^n-1$ and the automorphism group $Aut_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})cong mathbb{Z}/n$.



    Proposition [Jacobson, Velez]: One has $Gcong mathbb{Z}/n rtimes (mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ if and only if $n$ is odd, or $n$ is even and $sqrt{a}notin mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$.



    Sepcial attention is needed for the case $n=2^k$; see also this MO-question.






    share|cite|improve this answer































      1














      A few remarks on this specific galois group: Consider the field extension $mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q}$ and $zeta$ a primitive root of $X^{n} - 1 in mathbb{Q}[X]$. A general fact of cyclotomic field extensions is that in this case: $mathrm{Gal}(mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q})cong (mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}$ whereas $|(mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}|=varphi(n)$. Let $a in mathbb{Q}$ such that $sqrt[n]{a} notin mathbb{Q} $ then the splitting field of $X^n - a$ is as mentioned above given by
      $$ mathrm{SF}(X^n - a)=mathbb{Q}(zeta, sqrt[n]{a}).$$
      Furthermore the automorphism group of $ mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$ is cyclic of order $[mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}):mathbb{Q}]=n$ hence $mathrm{Aut}_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})) cong mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z}$. Note that both groups embed into the full galois group and moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $. One could then suggest (following theorems of galois theory) that the full galois groups is given by their product but this fails if we consider $mathrm{Gal}(X^4 - 5) cong mathrm{D}_{4} $ which is not a direct product of cyclic groups. However if $ n=p $ is prime then $(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}=mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z}triangleleft mathrm{G}$ and since $|mathrm{G}|=p(p-1)$ we can apply Schur-Zassenhaus because for all primes $p$
      $$ mathrm{gcd}(|(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}|, [G:(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}]) =mathrm{gcd}(p-1,p)=1. $$
      This yields a subgroup $mathrm{U} subseteq mathrm{G}$ such that $mathrm{G}cong (mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}ltimes mathrm{U} $ and $|mathrm{U}|=p $ hence $mathrm{U}cong mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}$ therefore
      $$mathrm{Gal}(X^p-a) cong mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z} ltimes mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}. $$






      share|cite|improve this answer



















      • 1




        The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
        – Dietrich Burde
        Dec 23 '16 at 14:37












      • See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
        – nguyen quang do
        Nov 20 '17 at 13:15











      Your Answer





      StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
      return StackExchange.using("mathjaxEditing", function () {
      StackExchange.MarkdownEditor.creationCallbacks.add(function (editor, postfix) {
      StackExchange.mathjaxEditing.prepareWmdForMathJax(editor, postfix, [["$", "$"], ["\\(","\\)"]]);
      });
      });
      }, "mathjax-editing");

      StackExchange.ready(function() {
      var channelOptions = {
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "69"
      };
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
      createEditor();
      });
      }
      else {
      createEditor();
      }
      });

      function createEditor() {
      StackExchange.prepareEditor({
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader: {
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      },
      noCode: true, onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      });


      }
      });














      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function () {
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f204552%2fcomputing-the-galois-group-of-polynomials-xn-a-in-mathbbqx%23new-answer', 'question_page');
      }
      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      1














      The minimal polynomial of $zeta_n$ and $sqrt[n]a$ are almost always different. In fact, every root in $mathbb C$ of the $n$th cyclotomic polynomial has absolute value $1$, whereas $sqrt[n]a$ usually has not.
      The only exceptions are $a=1$ and $a=-1$.
      For $a=1$, the splitting field is simply $mathbb Q[zeta_n]$.
      For $a=-1$, a solution to $x^n+1=0$ is also a solution to $x^{2n}-1=0$, hence the splitting field is simple $mathbb Q[zeta_{2n}]$.






      share|cite|improve this answer


























        1














        The minimal polynomial of $zeta_n$ and $sqrt[n]a$ are almost always different. In fact, every root in $mathbb C$ of the $n$th cyclotomic polynomial has absolute value $1$, whereas $sqrt[n]a$ usually has not.
        The only exceptions are $a=1$ and $a=-1$.
        For $a=1$, the splitting field is simply $mathbb Q[zeta_n]$.
        For $a=-1$, a solution to $x^n+1=0$ is also a solution to $x^{2n}-1=0$, hence the splitting field is simple $mathbb Q[zeta_{2n}]$.






        share|cite|improve this answer
























          1












          1








          1






          The minimal polynomial of $zeta_n$ and $sqrt[n]a$ are almost always different. In fact, every root in $mathbb C$ of the $n$th cyclotomic polynomial has absolute value $1$, whereas $sqrt[n]a$ usually has not.
          The only exceptions are $a=1$ and $a=-1$.
          For $a=1$, the splitting field is simply $mathbb Q[zeta_n]$.
          For $a=-1$, a solution to $x^n+1=0$ is also a solution to $x^{2n}-1=0$, hence the splitting field is simple $mathbb Q[zeta_{2n}]$.






          share|cite|improve this answer












          The minimal polynomial of $zeta_n$ and $sqrt[n]a$ are almost always different. In fact, every root in $mathbb C$ of the $n$th cyclotomic polynomial has absolute value $1$, whereas $sqrt[n]a$ usually has not.
          The only exceptions are $a=1$ and $a=-1$.
          For $a=1$, the splitting field is simply $mathbb Q[zeta_n]$.
          For $a=-1$, a solution to $x^n+1=0$ is also a solution to $x^{2n}-1=0$, hence the splitting field is simple $mathbb Q[zeta_{2n}]$.







          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered Sep 29 '12 at 20:47









          Hagen von EitzenHagen von Eitzen

          276k21269496




          276k21269496























              9














              Let $K=mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$ and $L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. Then the splitting field
              of $X^n-a$ is given by $F=KL$ and has degree
              $$
              [F:mathbb{Q}]=[KL:mathbb{Q}]=frac{[K:mathbb{Q}][L:mathbb{Q}]}{[Kcap L:mathbb{Q}]}=frac{phi(n)n}{2^s},
              $$

              where $sge 0$ satisfies $2^smid phi(n)$ and $Kcap L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[2^s]{a})$.
              So the point is that we need to determine the intersection $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)cap mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. This intersection is often not just $mathbb{Q}$; note for example that $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1 bmod 4$. A complete answer for this (and the whole question)
              has been published by Jacobson and Velez in "The Galois group of a radical extension of the rationals", in 1990.
              Let $G$ be the Galois group of $X^n-a$. It is obvious that $G$ embedds naturally into the semidirect product of the Galois group $(mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ of $X^n-1$ and the automorphism group $Aut_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})cong mathbb{Z}/n$.



              Proposition [Jacobson, Velez]: One has $Gcong mathbb{Z}/n rtimes (mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ if and only if $n$ is odd, or $n$ is even and $sqrt{a}notin mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$.



              Sepcial attention is needed for the case $n=2^k$; see also this MO-question.






              share|cite|improve this answer




























                9














                Let $K=mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$ and $L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. Then the splitting field
                of $X^n-a$ is given by $F=KL$ and has degree
                $$
                [F:mathbb{Q}]=[KL:mathbb{Q}]=frac{[K:mathbb{Q}][L:mathbb{Q}]}{[Kcap L:mathbb{Q}]}=frac{phi(n)n}{2^s},
                $$

                where $sge 0$ satisfies $2^smid phi(n)$ and $Kcap L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[2^s]{a})$.
                So the point is that we need to determine the intersection $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)cap mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. This intersection is often not just $mathbb{Q}$; note for example that $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1 bmod 4$. A complete answer for this (and the whole question)
                has been published by Jacobson and Velez in "The Galois group of a radical extension of the rationals", in 1990.
                Let $G$ be the Galois group of $X^n-a$. It is obvious that $G$ embedds naturally into the semidirect product of the Galois group $(mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ of $X^n-1$ and the automorphism group $Aut_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})cong mathbb{Z}/n$.



                Proposition [Jacobson, Velez]: One has $Gcong mathbb{Z}/n rtimes (mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ if and only if $n$ is odd, or $n$ is even and $sqrt{a}notin mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$.



                Sepcial attention is needed for the case $n=2^k$; see also this MO-question.






                share|cite|improve this answer


























                  9












                  9








                  9






                  Let $K=mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$ and $L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. Then the splitting field
                  of $X^n-a$ is given by $F=KL$ and has degree
                  $$
                  [F:mathbb{Q}]=[KL:mathbb{Q}]=frac{[K:mathbb{Q}][L:mathbb{Q}]}{[Kcap L:mathbb{Q}]}=frac{phi(n)n}{2^s},
                  $$

                  where $sge 0$ satisfies $2^smid phi(n)$ and $Kcap L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[2^s]{a})$.
                  So the point is that we need to determine the intersection $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)cap mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. This intersection is often not just $mathbb{Q}$; note for example that $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1 bmod 4$. A complete answer for this (and the whole question)
                  has been published by Jacobson and Velez in "The Galois group of a radical extension of the rationals", in 1990.
                  Let $G$ be the Galois group of $X^n-a$. It is obvious that $G$ embedds naturally into the semidirect product of the Galois group $(mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ of $X^n-1$ and the automorphism group $Aut_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})cong mathbb{Z}/n$.



                  Proposition [Jacobson, Velez]: One has $Gcong mathbb{Z}/n rtimes (mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ if and only if $n$ is odd, or $n$ is even and $sqrt{a}notin mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$.



                  Sepcial attention is needed for the case $n=2^k$; see also this MO-question.






                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  Let $K=mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$ and $L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. Then the splitting field
                  of $X^n-a$ is given by $F=KL$ and has degree
                  $$
                  [F:mathbb{Q}]=[KL:mathbb{Q}]=frac{[K:mathbb{Q}][L:mathbb{Q}]}{[Kcap L:mathbb{Q}]}=frac{phi(n)n}{2^s},
                  $$

                  where $sge 0$ satisfies $2^smid phi(n)$ and $Kcap L=mathbb{Q}(sqrt[2^s]{a})$.
                  So the point is that we need to determine the intersection $mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)cap mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$. This intersection is often not just $mathbb{Q}$; note for example that $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1 bmod 4$. A complete answer for this (and the whole question)
                  has been published by Jacobson and Velez in "The Galois group of a radical extension of the rationals", in 1990.
                  Let $G$ be the Galois group of $X^n-a$. It is obvious that $G$ embedds naturally into the semidirect product of the Galois group $(mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ of $X^n-1$ and the automorphism group $Aut_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})cong mathbb{Z}/n$.



                  Proposition [Jacobson, Velez]: One has $Gcong mathbb{Z}/n rtimes (mathbb{Z}/n)^{times}$ if and only if $n$ is odd, or $n$ is even and $sqrt{a}notin mathbb{Q}(zeta_n)$.



                  Sepcial attention is needed for the case $n=2^k$; see also this MO-question.







                  share|cite|improve this answer














                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer








                  edited Jan 3 at 13:06

























                  answered Dec 23 '16 at 14:56









                  Dietrich BurdeDietrich Burde

                  78.1k64386




                  78.1k64386























                      1














                      A few remarks on this specific galois group: Consider the field extension $mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q}$ and $zeta$ a primitive root of $X^{n} - 1 in mathbb{Q}[X]$. A general fact of cyclotomic field extensions is that in this case: $mathrm{Gal}(mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q})cong (mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}$ whereas $|(mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}|=varphi(n)$. Let $a in mathbb{Q}$ such that $sqrt[n]{a} notin mathbb{Q} $ then the splitting field of $X^n - a$ is as mentioned above given by
                      $$ mathrm{SF}(X^n - a)=mathbb{Q}(zeta, sqrt[n]{a}).$$
                      Furthermore the automorphism group of $ mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$ is cyclic of order $[mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}):mathbb{Q}]=n$ hence $mathrm{Aut}_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})) cong mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z}$. Note that both groups embed into the full galois group and moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $. One could then suggest (following theorems of galois theory) that the full galois groups is given by their product but this fails if we consider $mathrm{Gal}(X^4 - 5) cong mathrm{D}_{4} $ which is not a direct product of cyclic groups. However if $ n=p $ is prime then $(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}=mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z}triangleleft mathrm{G}$ and since $|mathrm{G}|=p(p-1)$ we can apply Schur-Zassenhaus because for all primes $p$
                      $$ mathrm{gcd}(|(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}|, [G:(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}]) =mathrm{gcd}(p-1,p)=1. $$
                      This yields a subgroup $mathrm{U} subseteq mathrm{G}$ such that $mathrm{G}cong (mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}ltimes mathrm{U} $ and $|mathrm{U}|=p $ hence $mathrm{U}cong mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}$ therefore
                      $$mathrm{Gal}(X^p-a) cong mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z} ltimes mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}. $$






                      share|cite|improve this answer



















                      • 1




                        The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                        – Dietrich Burde
                        Dec 23 '16 at 14:37












                      • See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                        – nguyen quang do
                        Nov 20 '17 at 13:15
















                      1














                      A few remarks on this specific galois group: Consider the field extension $mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q}$ and $zeta$ a primitive root of $X^{n} - 1 in mathbb{Q}[X]$. A general fact of cyclotomic field extensions is that in this case: $mathrm{Gal}(mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q})cong (mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}$ whereas $|(mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}|=varphi(n)$. Let $a in mathbb{Q}$ such that $sqrt[n]{a} notin mathbb{Q} $ then the splitting field of $X^n - a$ is as mentioned above given by
                      $$ mathrm{SF}(X^n - a)=mathbb{Q}(zeta, sqrt[n]{a}).$$
                      Furthermore the automorphism group of $ mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$ is cyclic of order $[mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}):mathbb{Q}]=n$ hence $mathrm{Aut}_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})) cong mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z}$. Note that both groups embed into the full galois group and moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $. One could then suggest (following theorems of galois theory) that the full galois groups is given by their product but this fails if we consider $mathrm{Gal}(X^4 - 5) cong mathrm{D}_{4} $ which is not a direct product of cyclic groups. However if $ n=p $ is prime then $(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}=mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z}triangleleft mathrm{G}$ and since $|mathrm{G}|=p(p-1)$ we can apply Schur-Zassenhaus because for all primes $p$
                      $$ mathrm{gcd}(|(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}|, [G:(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}]) =mathrm{gcd}(p-1,p)=1. $$
                      This yields a subgroup $mathrm{U} subseteq mathrm{G}$ such that $mathrm{G}cong (mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}ltimes mathrm{U} $ and $|mathrm{U}|=p $ hence $mathrm{U}cong mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}$ therefore
                      $$mathrm{Gal}(X^p-a) cong mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z} ltimes mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}. $$






                      share|cite|improve this answer



















                      • 1




                        The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                        – Dietrich Burde
                        Dec 23 '16 at 14:37












                      • See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                        – nguyen quang do
                        Nov 20 '17 at 13:15














                      1












                      1








                      1






                      A few remarks on this specific galois group: Consider the field extension $mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q}$ and $zeta$ a primitive root of $X^{n} - 1 in mathbb{Q}[X]$. A general fact of cyclotomic field extensions is that in this case: $mathrm{Gal}(mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q})cong (mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}$ whereas $|(mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}|=varphi(n)$. Let $a in mathbb{Q}$ such that $sqrt[n]{a} notin mathbb{Q} $ then the splitting field of $X^n - a$ is as mentioned above given by
                      $$ mathrm{SF}(X^n - a)=mathbb{Q}(zeta, sqrt[n]{a}).$$
                      Furthermore the automorphism group of $ mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$ is cyclic of order $[mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}):mathbb{Q}]=n$ hence $mathrm{Aut}_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})) cong mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z}$. Note that both groups embed into the full galois group and moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $. One could then suggest (following theorems of galois theory) that the full galois groups is given by their product but this fails if we consider $mathrm{Gal}(X^4 - 5) cong mathrm{D}_{4} $ which is not a direct product of cyclic groups. However if $ n=p $ is prime then $(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}=mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z}triangleleft mathrm{G}$ and since $|mathrm{G}|=p(p-1)$ we can apply Schur-Zassenhaus because for all primes $p$
                      $$ mathrm{gcd}(|(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}|, [G:(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}]) =mathrm{gcd}(p-1,p)=1. $$
                      This yields a subgroup $mathrm{U} subseteq mathrm{G}$ such that $mathrm{G}cong (mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}ltimes mathrm{U} $ and $|mathrm{U}|=p $ hence $mathrm{U}cong mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}$ therefore
                      $$mathrm{Gal}(X^p-a) cong mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z} ltimes mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}. $$






                      share|cite|improve this answer














                      A few remarks on this specific galois group: Consider the field extension $mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q}$ and $zeta$ a primitive root of $X^{n} - 1 in mathbb{Q}[X]$. A general fact of cyclotomic field extensions is that in this case: $mathrm{Gal}(mathbb{Q}(zeta)|mathbb{Q})cong (mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}$ whereas $|(mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z})^{*}|=varphi(n)$. Let $a in mathbb{Q}$ such that $sqrt[n]{a} notin mathbb{Q} $ then the splitting field of $X^n - a$ is as mentioned above given by
                      $$ mathrm{SF}(X^n - a)=mathbb{Q}(zeta, sqrt[n]{a}).$$
                      Furthermore the automorphism group of $ mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})$ is cyclic of order $[mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}):mathbb{Q}]=n$ hence $mathrm{Aut}_{mathbb{Q}}(mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a})) cong mathbb{Z}/nmathbb{Z}$. Note that both groups embed into the full galois group and moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $. One could then suggest (following theorems of galois theory) that the full galois groups is given by their product but this fails if we consider $mathrm{Gal}(X^4 - 5) cong mathrm{D}_{4} $ which is not a direct product of cyclic groups. However if $ n=p $ is prime then $(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}=mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z}triangleleft mathrm{G}$ and since $|mathrm{G}|=p(p-1)$ we can apply Schur-Zassenhaus because for all primes $p$
                      $$ mathrm{gcd}(|(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}|, [G:(mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}]) =mathrm{gcd}(p-1,p)=1. $$
                      This yields a subgroup $mathrm{U} subseteq mathrm{G}$ such that $mathrm{G}cong (mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z})^{*}ltimes mathrm{U} $ and $|mathrm{U}|=p $ hence $mathrm{U}cong mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}$ therefore
                      $$mathrm{Gal}(X^p-a) cong mathbb{Z}/(p-1)mathbb{Z} ltimes mathbb{Z}/pmathbb{Z}. $$







                      share|cite|improve this answer














                      share|cite|improve this answer



                      share|cite|improve this answer








                      edited Feb 8 '15 at 15:02

























                      answered Feb 7 '15 at 18:41









                      einfachEriceinfachEric

                      193




                      193








                      • 1




                        The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                        – Dietrich Burde
                        Dec 23 '16 at 14:37












                      • See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                        – nguyen quang do
                        Nov 20 '17 at 13:15














                      • 1




                        The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                        – Dietrich Burde
                        Dec 23 '16 at 14:37












                      • See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                        – nguyen quang do
                        Nov 20 '17 at 13:15








                      1




                      1




                      The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                      – Dietrich Burde
                      Dec 23 '16 at 14:37






                      The claim that "moreover $mathbb{Q}(sqrt[n]{a}) cap mathbb{Q}(zeta)= mathbb{Q} $" is *not* true in general. Take $X^{10}-5$, so $n=10$ and $a=5$. Then the intersection is $mathbb{Q}(sqrt{5})$, because $sqrt{p}in mathbb{Q}(zeta_p)$ for all primes $pequiv 1bmod 4$, and this holds for $p=5$.
                      – Dietrich Burde
                      Dec 23 '16 at 14:37














                      See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                      – nguyen quang do
                      Nov 20 '17 at 13:15




                      See also math.stackexchange.com/a/2529029/300700
                      – nguyen quang do
                      Nov 20 '17 at 13:15


















                      draft saved

                      draft discarded




















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid



                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                      Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function () {
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f204552%2fcomputing-the-galois-group-of-polynomials-xn-a-in-mathbbqx%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                      }
                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Ellipse (mathématiques)

                      Quarter-circle Tiles

                      Mont Emei