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The author offers a thorough presentation of the classical theory
of algebraic numbers and algebraic functions which both in its
conception and in many details differs from the current literature
on the subject. The basic features are: Field-theoretic
preliminaries and a detailed presentation of Dedekind's ideal
theory including non-principal orders and various types of class
groups; the classical theory of algebraic number fields with a
focus on quadratic, cubic and cyclotomic fields; basics of the
analytic theory including the prime ideal theorem, density results
and the determination of the arithmetic by the class group; a
thorough presentation of valuation theory including the theory of
difference, discriminants, and higher ramification. The theory of
function fields is based on the ideal and valuation theory
developed before; it presents the Riemann-Roch theorem on the basis
of Weil differentials and highlights in detail the connection with
classical differentials. The theory of congruence zeta functions
and a proof of the Hasse-Weil theorem represent the culminating
point of the volume. The volume is accessible with a basic
knowledge in algebra and elementary number theory. It empowers the
reader to follow the advanced number-theoretic literature, and is a
solid basis for the study of the forthcoming volume on the
foundations and main results of class field theory. Key features: *
A thorough presentation of the theory of Algebraic Numbers and
Algebraic Functions on an ideal and valuation-theoretic basis. *
Several of the topics both in the number field and in the function
field case were not presented before in this context. * Despite
presenting many advanced topics, the text is easily readable. Franz
Halter-Koch is professor emeritus at the university of Graz. He is
the author of "Ideal Systems" (Marcel Dekker,1998), "Quadratic
Irrationals" (CRC, 2013), and a co-author of "Non-Unique
Factorizations" (CRC 2006).
From its origins in algebraic number theory, the theory of
non-unique factorizations has emerged as an independent branch of
algebra and number theory. Focused efforts over the past few
decades have wrought a great number and variety of results.
However, these remain dispersed throughout the vast literature. For
the first time, Non-Unique Factorizations: Algebraic,
Combinatorial, and Analytic Theory offers a look at the present
state of the theory in a single, unified resource. Taking a broad
look at the algebraic, combinatorial, and analytic fundamentals,
this book derives factorization results and applies them in
concrete arithmetical situations using appropriate transfer
principles. It begins with a basic introduction that can be
understood with knowledge of standard basic algebra. The authors
then move to the algebraic theory of monoids, arithmetic theory of
monoids, the structure of sets of lengths, additive group theory,
arithmetical invariants, and the arithmetic of Krull monoids. They
also provide a self-contained introduction to abstract analytic
number theory as well as a modern treatment of W. Narkiewicz's
analytic theory of non-unique factorizations. Non-Unique
Factorizations: Algebraic, Combinatorial, and Analytic Theory
builds the discussion from first principles to applied problem
solving, making it ideally suited to those not familiar with the
theory as well as those who wish to deepen their understanding.
A Thorough Presentation of the Theory of Algebraic Numbers and
Functions Built on a presentation of algebraic foundations Topics
in (algebraic) number theory are presented in a systematic, unified
and often in a original manner. Many of the topics covered are not
contained in books or in accessible surveys.
Quadratic Irrationals: An Introduction to Classical Number Theory
gives a unified treatment of the classical theory of quadratic
irrationals. Presenting the material in a modern and elementary
algebraic setting, the author focuses on equivalence, continued
fractions, quadratic characters, quadratic orders, binary quadratic
forms, and class groups. The book highlights the connection between
Gauss's theory of binary forms and the arithmetic of quadratic
orders. It collects essential results of the theory that have
previously been difficult to access and scattered in the
literature, including binary quadratic Diophantine equations and
explicit continued fractions, biquadratic class group characters,
the divisibility of class numbers by 16, F. Mertens' proof of
Gauss's duplication theorem, and a theory of binary quadratic forms
that departs from the restriction to fundamental discriminants. The
book also proves Dirichlet's theorem on primes in arithmetic
progressions, covers Dirichlet's class number formula, and shows
that every primitive binary quadratic form represents infinitely
many primes. The necessary fundamentals on algebra and elementary
number theory are given in an appendix. Research on number theory
has produced a wealth of interesting and beautiful results yet
topics are strewn throughout the literature, the notation is far
from being standardized, and a unifying approach to the different
aspects is lacking. Covering both classical and recent results,
this book unifies the theory of continued fractions, quadratic
orders, binary quadratic forms, and class groups based on the
concept of a quadratic irrational.
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