Fundamental question about field extensions Let k be an algebraically closed field. Let K \su

Aryan Phillips

Aryan Phillips

Answered question

2022-02-14

Fundamental question about field extensions
Let k be an algebraically closed field. Let Kk be a subfield, and suppose that it has an algebraic extension KL. Is it true (or at least well defined, because I'm not even sure about this) that Lk? One slightly different point of view is: given injections i:Kk,j:KL, the last one being algebraic, is there an injection l:Lk such that lj=i (i.e. l is a homomorphism of K-algebras)?

Answer & Explanation

gogrervisulget9z

gogrervisulget9z

Beginner2022-02-15Added 12 answers

You cannot prove that Lk, but you're right that there exists an embedding Lk that's the identity o K.
Consider the set ξ of pairs (F,jF), where KFL (as subfields) and jF:Fk is the identity on K.
We can partially order ξ by declaring (F1,jF1)(F2,jF2) if (and only if) F1F2 and the restriction of jF2 to F1 is jF1.
Clearly ξ is not empty, because (K,i)ξ. Moreover any chain in ξ has an upper bound: take the union of the first components of the pair and define the homomorphism accordingly.
By Zorn's lemma, there is a maximal element (F,jF) and we want to prove that F=L. Here the fact that L is algebraic over K is needed (up to now we didn't use it).
If aLF, the element a is algebraic over K and all it takes is to prove that we can extend jF to a homomorphism j:F(a)k. This is standard. But now (F(a), j) contradicts the maximality of (F,jF) and we're done.

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