Advanced Algebra

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Basic Algebra and Advanced Algebra systematically develop concepts and tools in algebra that are vital to every mathematician, whether pure or applied, aspiring or established. Together, the two books give the reader a global view of algebra and its role in mathematics as a whole.

Key topics and features of Advanced Algebra:

*Topics build upon the linear algebra, group theory, factorization of ideals, structure of fields, Galois theory, and elementary theory of modules as developed in Basic Algebra

*Chapters treat various topics in commutative and noncommutative algebra, providing introductions to the theory of associative algebras, homological algebra, algebraic number theory, and algebraic geometry

*Sections in two chapters relate the theory to the subject of Gröbner bases, the foundation for handling systems of polynomial equations in computer applications

*Text emphasizes connections between algebra and other branches of mathematics, particularly topology and complex analysis

*Book carries on two prominent themes recurring in Basic Algebra: the analogy between integers and polynomials in one variable over a field, and the relationship between number theory and geometry

*Many examples and hundreds of problems are included, along with hints or complete solutions for most of the problems

*The exposition proceeds from the particular to the general, often providing examples well before a theory that incorporates them; it includes blocks of problems that illuminate aspects of the text and introduce additional topics

Advanced Algebra presents its subject matter in a forward-looking way that takes into account the historical development of the subject. It is suitable as a text for the more advanced parts of a two-semester first-year graduate sequence in algebra. It requires of the reader only a familiarity with the topics developed in Basic Algebra.

Author(s): Anthony W. Knapp
Series: Cornerstones
Edition: 1
Publisher: Birkhäuser Boston
Year: 2007

Language: English
Pages: 751

Preface......Page 8
List of Figures......Page 12
Dependence among chapters......Page 13
Guide for the Reader......Page 14
Notation and Terminology......Page 18
Contents......Page 4
Transition to Modern Number Theory......Page 22
Wedderburn–Artin Ring Theory......Page 97
Brauer Group......Page 144
Homological Algebra......Page 187
Three Theorems in Algebraic Number Theory......Page 283
Reinterpretation with Adeles and Ideles......Page 334
Infinite Field Extensions......Page 424
Background for Algebraic Geometry......Page 468
The Number Theory of Algebraic Curves......Page 541
Methods of Algebraic Geometry......Page 579
Hints for Solutions of problems......Page 670
Selected References......Page 734
Index......Page 742