Normal extension

In abstract algebra, an algebraic field extension L/K is said to be normal if L is the splitting field of a family of polynomials in K[X]. Bourbaki calls such an extension a quasi-Galois extension.

Equivalent properties and examples

The normality of L/K is equivalent to either of the following properties. Let Ka be an algebraic closure of K containing L.

If L is a finite extension of K that is separable (for example, this is automatically satisfied if K is finite or has characteristic zero) then the following property is also equivalent:

For example, \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{2}) is a normal extension of \mathbb{Q}, since it is a splitting field of x2  2. On the other hand, \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}) is not a normal extension of \mathbb{Q} since the irreducible polynomial x3  2 has one root in it (namely, \sqrt[3]{2}), but not all of them (it does not have the non-real cubic roots of 2).

The fact that \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}) is not a normal extension of \mathbb{Q} can also be seen using the first of the three properties above. The field \mathbb{A} of algebraic numbers is an algebraic closure of \mathbb{Q} containing \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}). On the other hand

\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2})=\{a+b\sqrt[3]{2}+c\sqrt[3]{4}\in\mathbb{A}\,|\,a,b,c\in\mathbb{Q}\}

and, if ω is one of the two non-real cubic roots of 2, then the map

\begin{array}{rccc}\sigma:&\mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2})&\longrightarrow&\mathbb{A}\\&a+b\sqrt[3]{2}+c\sqrt[3]{4}&\mapsto&a+b\omega\sqrt[3]{2}+c\omega^2\sqrt[3]{4}\end{array}

is an embedding of \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}) in \mathbb{A} whose restriction to \mathbb{Q} is the identity. However, σ is not an automorphism of \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}).

For any prime p, the extension \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[p]{2}, \zeta_p) is normal of degree p(p  1). It is a splitting field of xp  2. Here \zeta_p denotes any pth primitive root of unity. The field \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}, \zeta_3) is the normal closure (see below) of \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt[3]{2}).

Other properties

Let L be an extension of a field K. Then:

Normal closure

If K is a field and L is an algebraic extension of K, then there is some algebraic extension M of L such that M is a normal extension of K. Furthermore, up to isomorphism there is only one such extension which is minimal, i.e. such that the only subfield of M which contains L and which is a normal extension of K is M itself. This extension is called the normal closure of the extension L of K.

If L is a finite extension of K, then its normal closure is also a finite extension.

See also

References