Monogenic field

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In mathematics, a monogenic field is an algebraic number field K for which there exists an element a such that the ring of integers OK is the subring Z[a] of K generated by a. Then OK is a quotient of the polynomial ring Z[X] and the powers of a constitute a power integral basis.

In a monogenic field K, the field discriminant of K is equal to the discriminant of the minimal polynomial of ฮฑ.

Examples

Examples of monogenic fields include:

if K=๐(d) with d a square-free integer, then OK=๐™[a] where a=(1+d)/2 if d โ‰ก 1 (mod 4) and a=d if d โ‰ก 2 or 3 (mod 4).
if K=๐(ζ) with ζ a root of unity, then OK=๐™[ζ]. Also the maximal real subfield ๐(ζ)+=๐(ζ+ζ1) is monogenic, with ring of integers ๐™[ζ+ζ1].

While all quadratic fields are monogenic, already among cubic fields there are many that are not monogenic. The first example of a non-monogenic number field that was found is the cubic field generated by a root of the polynomial X3X22X8, due to Richard Dedekind.

References

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