In mathematics, a reciprocity law is a generalization of the
law of quadratic reciprocity to arbitrary monic irreducible polynomials
with integer coefficients. Recall that first reciprocity law, quadratic reciprocity, determines when an irreducible polynomial
splits into linear terms when reduced mod
. That is, it determines for which prime numbers the relation
holds. For a general reciprocity law
pg 3, it is defined as the rule determining which primes
the polynomial
splits into linear factors, denoted
.
There are several different ways to express reciprocity laws. The early reciprocity laws found in the 19th century were usually expressed in terms of a
power residue symbol (''p''/''q'') generalizing the
quadratic reciprocity symbol, that describes when a
prime number
A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that is not a Product (mathematics), product of two smaller natural numbers. A natural number greater than 1 that is not prime is called a composite number. For example, 5 is prime ...
is an ''n''th power residue
modulo
In computing and mathematics, the modulo operation returns the remainder or signed remainder of a division, after one number is divided by another, the latter being called the '' modulus'' of the operation.
Given two positive numbers and , mo ...
another prime, and gave a relation between (''p''/''q'') and (''q''/''p'').
Hilbert
David Hilbert (; ; 23 January 1862 – 14 February 1943) was a German mathematician and philosophy of mathematics, philosopher of mathematics and one of the most influential mathematicians of his time.
Hilbert discovered and developed a broad ...
reformulated the reciprocity laws as saying that a product over ''p'' of Hilbert
norm residue symbols (''a'',''b''/''p''), taking values in roots of unity, is equal to 1.
Artin reformulated the reciprocity laws as a statement that the Artin symbol from ideals (or ideles) to elements of a
Galois group
In mathematics, in the area of abstract algebra known as Galois theory, the Galois group of a certain type of field extension is a specific group associated with the field extension. The study of field extensions and their relationship to the pol ...
is trivial on a certain subgroup. Several more recent generalizations express reciprocity laws using cohomology of groups or representations of adelic groups or algebraic K-groups, and their relationship with the original quadratic reciprocity law can be hard to see.
The name reciprocity law was coined by
Legendre in his 1785 publication ''Recherches d'analyse indéterminée'',
because odd primes ''reciprocate'' or not in the sense of quadratic reciprocity stated below according to their residue classes
. This reciprocating behavior does not generalize well, the equivalent splitting behavior does. The name reciprocity law is still used in the more general context of splittings.
Quadratic reciprocity
In terms of the
Legendre symbol
In number theory, the Legendre symbol is a multiplicative function with values 1, −1, 0 that is a quadratic character modulo of an odd prime number ''p'': its value at a (nonzero) quadratic residue mod ''p'' is 1 and at a non-quadratic re ...
, the law of quadratic reciprocity states
for positive odd primes
we have
Using the definition of the Legendre symbol this is equivalent to a more elementary statement about equations.
For positive odd primes
the solubility of
for
determines the solubility of
for
and vice versa by the comparatively simple criterion whether
is
or
.
By the
factor theorem
In algebra, the factor theorem connects polynomial factors with polynomial roots. Specifically, if f(x) is a polynomial, then x - a is a factor of f(x) if and only if f (a) = 0 (that is, a is a root of the polynomial). The theorem is a special cas ...
and the
behavior of degrees in factorizations the solubility of such quadratic congruence equations is equivalent to the splitting of associated quadratic polynomials over a residue ring into linear factors. In this terminology the law of quadratic reciprocity is stated as follows.
For positive odd primes
the splitting of the polynomial
in
-residues determines the splitting of the polynomial
in
-residues and vice versa through the quantity
.
This establishes the bridge from the name giving ''reciprocating'' behavior of primes introduced by Legendre to the ''splitting'' behavior of polynomials used in the generalizations.
Cubic reciprocity
The law of cubic reciprocity for
Eisenstein integers
In mathematics, the Eisenstein integers (named after Gotthold Eisenstein), occasionally also known as Eulerian integers (after Leonhard Euler), are the complex numbers of the form
: z = a + b\omega ,
where and are integers and
: \omega = \frac ...
states that if α and β are primary (primes congruent to 2 mod 3) then
:
Quartic reciprocity
In terms of the quartic residue symbol, the law of quartic reciprocity for
Gaussian integer
In number theory, a Gaussian integer is a complex number whose real and imaginary parts are both integers. The Gaussian integers, with ordinary addition and multiplication of complex numbers, form an integral domain, usually written as \mathbf ...
s states that if π and θ are primary (congruent to 1 mod (1+''i'')
3) Gaussian primes then
:
Octic reciprocity
Eisenstein reciprocity
Suppose that ζ is an
th root of unity for some odd prime
.
The power character is the power of ζ such that
:
for any prime ideal
of Z
� It is extended to other ideals by multiplicativity.
The Eisenstein reciprocity law states that
:
for ''a'' any rational integer coprime to
and α any element of Z
�that is coprime to ''a'' and
and congruent to a rational integer modulo (1–ζ)
2.
Kummer reciprocity
Suppose that ζ is an ''l''th root of unity for some odd
regular prime ''l''. Since ''l'' is regular, we can extend the symbol to ideals in a unique way such that
:
where ''n'' is some integer prime to ''l'' such that ''p''
''n'' is principal.
The Kummer reciprocity law states that
:
for ''p'' and ''q'' any distinct prime ideals of Z
�other than (1–ζ).
Hilbert reciprocity
In terms of the Hilbert symbol, Hilbert's reciprocity law for an algebraic number field states that
:
where the product is over all finite and infinite places.
Over the rational numbers this is equivalent to the law of quadratic reciprocity. To see this take ''a'' and ''b'' to be distinct odd primes.
Then Hilbert's law becomes
But (''p'',''q'')
''p'' is equal to the Legendre symbol, (''p'',''q'')
∞ is 1 if one of ''p'' and ''q'' is positive and –1 otherwise, and (''p'',''q'')
2 is (–1)
(''p''–1)(''q''–1)/4. So for ''p'' and ''q'' positive odd primes Hilbert's law is the law of quadratic reciprocity.
Artin reciprocity
In the language of
ideles, the Artin reciprocity law for a finite extension ''L''/''K'' states that the
Artin map from the
idele class group ''C''
''K'' to the
abelianization Gal(''L''/''K'')
ab of the Galois group vanishes on ''N''
''L''/''K''(''C''
''L''), and induces an isomorphism
:
Although it is not immediately obvious, the Artin reciprocity law easily implies all the previously discovered reciprocity laws, by applying it to suitable extensions ''L''/''K''.
For example, in the special case when ''K'' contains the ''n''th roots of unity and ''L''=''K''
1/''n''">'a''1/''n''is a Kummer extension of ''K'', the fact that the Artin map vanishes on ''N''
''L''/''K''(''C''
''L'') implies Hilbert's reciprocity law for the Hilbert symbol.
Local reciprocity
Hasse introduced a local analogue of the Artin reciprocity law, called the local reciprocity law. One form of it states that for a finite abelian extension of ''L''/''K'' of local fields, the Artin map is an isomorphism
from
onto the Galois group
.
Explicit reciprocity laws
In order to get a classical style reciprocity law from the Hilbert reciprocity law Î (''a'',''b'')
''p''=1, one needs to know the values of (''a'',''b'')
''p'' for ''p'' dividing ''n''. Explicit formulas for this are sometimes called explicit reciprocity laws.
Power reciprocity laws
A ''power reciprocity law'' may be formulated as an analogue of the
law of quadratic reciprocity in terms of the Hilbert symbols as
[Neukirch (1999) p.415]
:
Rational reciprocity laws
A rational reciprocity law is one stated in terms of rational integers without the use of roots of unity.
Scholz's reciprocity law
Shimura reciprocity
Weil reciprocity law
Langlands reciprocity
The
Langlands program
In mathematics, the Langlands program is a set of conjectures about connections between number theory, the theory of automorphic forms, and geometry. It was proposed by . It seeks to relate the structure of Galois groups in algebraic number t ...
includes several conjectures for general reductive algebraic groups, which for the special of the group GL
1 imply the Artin reciprocity law.
Yamamoto's reciprocity law
Yamamoto's reciprocity law is a reciprocity law related to class numbers of quadratic number fields.
See also
*
Hilbert's ninth problem
*
Stanley's reciprocity theorem
References
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*{{citation, mr=0308084
, last=Wyman, first= B. F.
, title=What is a reciprocity law?
, journal=Amer. Math. Monthly, volume= 79 , issue=6, year=1972, pages= 571–586, jstor=2317083, doi=10.2307/2317083. Correction, ibid. 80 (1973), 281.
Survey articles
Reciprocity laws and Galois representations: recent breakthroughs
Algebraic number theory