Suppose is a number field that is Galois over
with
group
.
Fix a prime
lying over
.
(Note: The decomposition group is called the ``splitting group''
in Swinnerton-Dyer. Everybody I know calls it the decomposition
group, so we will too.)
Let
denote the residue class field of
.
In this section we will prove that there is a natural exact sequence
where
is the of
, and
. The most interesting part of the proof is
showing that the natural map
is surjective.
We will also discuss the structure of
and introduce
Frobenius elements, which play a crucial roll in understanding Galois
representations.
Recall that acts on the set of primes
lying
over . Thus the decomposition group is the stabilizer in
of
. The orbit-stabilizer theorem implies that
equals the orbit of
, which by Theorem 13.2.2
equals the number of primes lying over , so
.
Lemma 14.1.2
The decomposition subgroups
corresponding to primes
lying over a given are all conjugate in .
Proof.
We have
if and only if
. Thus
if and only if
, so
. The lemma now follows
because, by Theorem
13.2.2,
acts transitively on the set of
lying over
.
The decomposition group is extremely useful because it allows us
to see the extension
as a tower of extensions, such that at
each step in the tower we understand well the splitting behavior
of the primes lying over . Now might be a good time to glance
ahead at Figure 14.1.2 on page .
We characterize the fixed field of
as follows.
Proof.
First suppose
, and note that by Galois theory
, and by Theorem
13.2.2, the group
acts transitively on the primes of
lying over
. One of
these primes is
, and
fixes
by definition, so there is
only one prime of
lying over
, i.e.,
does not
split in
. Conversely, if
is such that
does not split in
, then
fixes
(since it is the only
prime over
), so
, hence
.
Thus does not split in going from to --it does some
combination of ramifying and staying inert. To fill in more of
the picture, the following proposition asserts that splits
completely and does not ramify in
.
Proposition 14.1.4
Let for our fixed prime and Galois extension
.
Let
be for
and .
Then and
, i.e., does not ramify and splits
completely in . Also
and
.
Proof.
As mentioned right after Definition
14.1.1, the
orbit-stabilizer theorem implies that
, and
by Galois theory
.
Thus
Now
and
, so
we must have
and
.
Since
and
,
the proposition follows.
Subsections
William Stein
2004-05-06