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Algebraic Number Theory [Hardback]

(University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 504 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 862 g, 774 equations; 6 Tables, black and white, Contains 13 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-1999
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0849339898
  • ISBN-13: 9780849339899
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 504 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 862 g, 774 equations; 6 Tables, black and white, Contains 13 hardbacks
  • Sērija : Discrete Mathematics and Its Applications
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Mar-1999
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0849339898
  • ISBN-13: 9780849339899
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
From its history as an elegant but abstract area of mathematics, algebraic number theory now takes its place as a useful and accessible study with important real-world practicality. Unique among algebraic number theory texts, this important work offers a wealth of applications to cryptography, including factoring, primality-testing, and public-key cryptosystems.

A follow-up to Dr. Mollin's popular Fundamental Number Theory with Applications, Algebraic Number Theory provides a global approach to the subject that selectively avoids local theory. Instead, it carefully leads the student through each topic from the level of the algebraic integer, to the arithmetic of number fields, to ideal theory, and closes with reciprocity laws. In each chapter the author includes a section on a cryptographic application of the ideas presented, effectively demonstrating the pragmatic side of theory.

In this way Algebraic Number Theory provides a comprehensible yet thorough treatment of the material. Written for upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses in algebraic number theory, this one-of-a-kind text brings the subject matter to life with historical background and real-world practicality. It easily serves as the basis for a range of courses, from bare-bones algebraic number theory, to a course rich with cryptography applications, to a course using the basic theory to prove Fermat's Last Theorem for regular primes. Its offering of over 430 exercises with odd-numbered solutions provided in the back of the book and, even-numbered solutions available a separate manual makes this the ideal text for both students and instructors.
Preface ix
Suggested Course Outlines xiii
Algebraic Numbers
1(72)
Origins and Foundations
1(12)
Algebraic Numbers and Number Fields
13(12)
Discriminants, Norms, and Traces
25(7)
Algebraic Integers and Integral Bases
32(16)
Factorization and Divisibility
48(5)
Applications of Unique Factorization
53(14)
Applications: Factoring in Z Using Cubic Integers
67(6)
Arithmetic of Number Fields
73(54)
Quadratic Fields
73(8)
Cyclotomic Fields
81(8)
Units in Number Rings
89(4)
Geometry of Numbers
93(15)
Dirichlet's Unit Theorem
108(9)
Application: The Number Fields Sieve
117(10)
Ideal Theory
127(66)
Properties of Ideals
127(15)
PIDs and UFDs
142(6)
Norms of Ideals
148(5)
Ideal Classes --- The Class Group
153(6)
Class Numbers of Quadratic Fields
159(11)
Cyclotomic Fields and Kummer's Theorem --- Bernoulli Numbers and Irregular Primes
170(13)
Cryptography in Quadratic Fields
183(10)
Ideal Decomposition in Extension Fields
193(159)
Inertia, Ramification, and Splitting
193(16)
The Different and Discriminant
209(23)
Galois Theory and Decomposition
232(24)
The Kronecker-Weber Theorem
256(8)
An Application---Primality Testing
264(9)
Reciprocity Laws
Cubic Reciprocity
273(16)
The Biquadratic Reciprocity Law
289(17)
The Stickelberger Relation
306(19)
The Eisenstein Reciprocity Law
325(8)
Elliptic Curves, Factoring, and Primality
333(19)
Appendix A: Abstract Algebra 352(31)
Appendix B: Sequences and Series 383(10)
Appendix C: Galois Theory 393(9)
Appendix D: The Greek Alphabet 402(1)
Appendix E: Latin Phrases 403(2)
Solutions to Odd-Numbered Exercises 405(54)
Bibliogrpahy 459(5)
List of Symbols 464(2)
Index 466(17)
About the Author 483(1)