Pseudo algebraically closed field

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In mathematics, a field K is pseudo algebraically closed if it satisfies certain properties which hold for any algebraically closed field. The concept was introduced by James Ax in 1967.[1]

Formulation

A field K is pseudo algebraically closed (usually abbreviated by PAC[2]) if one of the following equivalent conditions holds:

  • Each absolutely irreducible variety V defined over K has a K-rational point.
  • For each absolutely irreducible polynomial fK[T1,T2,,Tr,X] with fX=0 and for each nonzero gK[T1,T2,,Tr] there exists (a,b)Kr+1 such that f(a,b)=0 and g(a)=0.
  • Each absolutely irreducible polynomial fK[T,X] has infinitely many K-rational points.
  • If R is a finitely generated integral domain over K with quotient field which is regular over K, then there exist a homomorphism h:RK such that h(a)=a for each aK

Examples

  • Algebraically closed fields and separably closed fields are always PAC.
  • Pseudo-finite fields and hyper-finite fields are PAC.
  • A non-principal ultraproduct of distinct finite fields is (pseudo-finite and hence[3]) PAC.[2] Ax deduces this from the Riemann hypothesis for curves over finite fields.[1]
  • Infinite algebraic extensions of finite fields are PAC.[4]
  • The PAC Nullstellensatz. The absolute Galois group G of a field K is profinite, hence compact, and hence equipped with a normalized Haar measure. Let K be a countable Hilbertian field and let e be a positive integer. Then for almost all e-tuple (σ1,...,σe)Ge, the fixed field of the subgroup generated by the automorphisms is PAC. Here the phrase "almost all" means "all but a set of measure zero".[5] (This result is a consequence of Hilbert's irreducibility theorem.)
  • Let K be the maximal totally real Galois extension of the rational numbers and i the square root of -1. Then K(i) is PAC.

Properties

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Fried & Jarden (2008) p.218
  2. 2.0 2.1 Fried & Jarden (2008) p.192
  3. Fried & Jarden (2008) p.449
  4. Fried & Jarden (2008) p.196
  5. Fried & Jarden (2008) p.380
  6. Fried & Jarden (2008) p.209
  7. 7.0 7.1 Fried & Jarden (2008) p.210
  8. Fried & Jarden (2008) p.462
  • Fried, Michael D.; Jarden, Moshe (2008). Field arithmetic. Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge. 11 (3rd revised ed.). Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-77269-9.