Different ideal
In algebraic number theory, the different ideal is an invariant attached to an extension of algebraic number fields.
Let L/K be such an extension, with rings of integers OL and OK respectively. The relative trace defines a bilinear on L by
in which the dual of OL is a fractional ideal of L containing OL. The (relative) different δL/K is the inverse of this fractional ideal: it is an ideal of OL.
The relative norm of the relative different is equal to the relative discriminant ΔL/K. In a tower of fields L/K/F the relative differents are related by δL/F = δL/K δK/F.
Ramification
The relative different encodes the ramification data of the field extension L/K. A prime ideal p of K ramifies in L if and only if it divides the relative discriminant ΔL/K. If
- p = P1e(1) ... Pke(k)
is the factorisation of p into prime ideals of L then Pi divides the relative different δL/K if and only if Pi is ramified, that is, if and only if the ramification index e(i) is greater than 1. The precise exponent to which a ramified prime P divides δ is termed the differential exponent of P and is equal to e-1 if P is tamely ramified: that is, when P does not divide e. In the case when P is wildly ramified the differential exponent lies in the range e to e+νP(e)-1.
Local computation
The different may be defined for an extension of local fields L/K. In this case we may take the extension to be simple, generated by a primitive element α which also generates a power integral basis. If f is the minimal polynomial for α then the different is generated by f'(α).
References
- Weiss, Edwin (1976), Algebraic number theory, Chelsea Publishing, ISBN 0-8284-0293-0.
- Frohlich, Albrecht & Martin Taylor (1991), Algebraic number theory, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 27, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-36664-X