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In [[algebraic number theory]], the '''Hilbert class field''' ''E'' of a [[number field]] ''K'' is the [[Maximal abelian extension|maximal abelian]] [[unramified]] extension of ''K''.   Its degree over ''K'' equals the class number of ''K'' and the [[Galois group]] of ''E'' over ''K'' is canonically isomorphic to the [[ideal class group]] of ''K'' using [[Frobenius element]]s for [[prime ideal]]s in ''K''.
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In this context, the Hilbert class field of ''K'' is not just unramified at the [[Prime_number#Primes_in_valuation_theory|finite places]] (the classical ideal theoretic interpretation) but also at the infinite places of ''K''. That is, every [[real embedding]] of ''K'' extends to a real embedding of ''E'' (rather than to a complex embedding of ''E'').
 
==Examples==
If the ring of integers of ''K'' is a [[unique factorization domain]], in particular, if <math> K = \mathbb{Q} </math> then ''K'' is its own Hilbert class field.
 
By contrast, let <math> K = \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{-15}) </math>. By analyzing ramification degrees over <math>\mathbb{Q}</math>, one can show that <math> L =  \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{-3}, \sqrt{5}) </math> is an everywhere unramified extension of ''K'', and it is certainly abelian. Hence the Hilbert class field of ''K'' is a nontrivial extension and the ring of integers of ''K'' cannot be a unique factorization domain. (In fact, using the [[Minkowski bound]], one can show that ''K'' has class number exactly 2.) Hence, the Hilbert class field is <math> L </math>.
 
To see why ramification at the archimedean primes must be taken into account, consider the [[real number|real]] [[quadratic field]] ''K'' obtained by adjoining the square root of 3 to '''Q'''. This field has class number 1, but the extension ''K''(''i'')/''K'' is unramified at all prime ideals in ''K'', so ''K'' admits finite abelian extensions of degree greater than 1
in which all primes of ''K'' are unramified.  This doesn't contradict the Hilbert class field of ''K'' being ''K'' itself: every proper finite abelian extension of ''K''
must ramify at some place, and in the extension ''K''(''i'')/''K'' there is ramification at the archimedean places:
the real embeddings of ''K'' extend to complex (rather than real) embeddings of ''K''(''i'').
 
==History==
 
The existence of a Hilbert class field for a given number field ''K'' was conjectured by [[David Hilbert]]{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} and proved by [[Philipp Furtwängler]].<ref>{{harvnb|Furtwängler|1906}}</ref> The existence of the Hilbert class field is a valuable tool in studying the structure of the [[ideal class group]] of a given field.
 
==Additional properties==
 
The Hilbert class field ''E'' also satisfies the following:
*''E'' is a finite Galois [[field extension|extension]] of ''K'' and [''E'' :'' K'']=''h''<sub>''K''</sub>, where ''h''<sub>''K''</sub> is the [[ideal class|class number]] of ''K''.
*The [[ideal class group]] of ''K'' is [[automorphism|isomorphic]] to the [[Galois group]] of ''E'' over ''K''.
*Every [[ideal (ring theory)|ideal]] of ''O''<sub>''K''</sub> is a [[principal ideal]] of the [[ring (mathematics)|ring]] extension ''O''<sub>''E''</sub> ([[principal ideal theorem]]).
*Every [[prime ideal]] ''P'' of ''O''<sub>''K''</sub> decomposes into the product of  ''h''<sub>''K''</sub>/''f'' prime ideals in  ''O''<sub>''E''</sub>, where ''f'' is the [[order of a group element|order]] of [''P''] in the ideal class group of ''O''<sub>''K''</sub>.
 
In fact, ''E'' is the unique [[field (mathematics)|field]] satisfying the first, second, and fourth properties.
 
==Explicit constructions==
If ''K'' is imaginary quadratic and ''A'' is an [[elliptic curve]] with [[complex multiplication]] by the [[ring of integers]] of ''K'', then adjoining the [[j-invariant]] of ''A'' to ''K'' gives the Hilbert class field.<ref>Theorem II.4.1 of {{harvnb|Silverman|1994}}</ref>
 
==Generalizations==
In [[class field theory]], one studies the [[ray class field]] with respect to a given [[Modulus_(algebraic_number_theory)|modulus]], which is a formal product of prime ideals (including, possibly, archimedean ones). The ray class field is the maximal abelian extension unramified outside the primes dividing the modulus and satisfying a particular ramification condition at the primes dividing the modulus. The Hilbert class field is then the ray class field with respect to the trivial modulus ''1''.
 
The ''narrow class field'' is the ray class field with respect to the modulus consisting of all infinite primes. For example, the argument above shows that <math> \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{3}, i) </math> is the narrow class field of <math> \mathbb{Q}(\sqrt{3}) </math>.
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
 
==References==
* {{Citation
| last=Childress
| first=Nancy
| title=Class field theory
| year=2009
| isbn=978-0-387-72489-8
| doi=10.1007/978-0-387-72490-4
| publisher=[[Springer Science+Business Media|Springer]]
| location=New York
| mr=2462595
}}
* {{Citation
| last=Furtwängler
| first=Philipp
| author-link=Philipp Furtwängler
| title=Allgemeiner Existenzbeweis für den Klassenkörper eines beliebigen algebraischen Zahlkörpers
| url=http://gdz.sub.uni-goettingen.de/dms/load/toc/?PPN=PPN235181684_0063&DMDID=dmdlog7
| year=1906
| journal=Mathematische Annalen
| volume=63
| issue=1
| pages=1–37
| doi=10.1007/BF01448421
 
 
| accessdate=2009-08-21
| mr=1511392
| jfm=37.0243.02
}}
* J. S. Milne, Class Field Theory (Course notes available at http://www.jmilne.org/math/).  See the Introduction chapter of the notes, especially p.&nbsp;4.
*{{Citation
| last=Silverman
| first=Joseph H.
| author-link=Joseph H. Silverman
| title=Advanced topics in the arithmetic of elliptic curves
| year=1994
| publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]]
| location=New York
| isbn=978-0-387-94325-1
| series=[[Graduate Texts in Mathematics]]
| volume=151
}}
* {{Citation
| last=Gras
| first=Georges
| title=Class field theory: From theory to practice
| year=second corrected printing 2005
| publisher=Springer
| location=New York}}
 
{{PlanetMath attribution|id=2870|title=Existence of Hilbert class field}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hilbert Class Field}}
[[Category:Class field theory]]

Latest revision as of 21:39, 25 December 2014

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