What Is the Galois Group of x^5 - 1 Over Q?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around determining the Galois group of the polynomial x^5 - 1 over the rational numbers Q, as well as identifying the fixed subfields corresponding to its subgroups. Participants explore the properties of the roots and their relationships within the context of Galois theory.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to identify the Galois group and its structure, suggesting it may be isomorphic to C4. They express uncertainty about the existence of intermediate fields and the implications of subgroup properties. Other participants question the necessity of roots in intermediate fields and explore the relationship between polynomials and their splitting fields.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the concepts, with some expressing clarity about the identification of intermediate fields and their corresponding subgroups. There is an ongoing exploration of the relationship between Galois groups and splitting fields, with no explicit consensus reached yet.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of potential misunderstandings regarding the properties of intermediate fields and the nature of Galois groups in relation to splitting fields, indicating a need for further clarification on these concepts.

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Homework Statement


I'm trying to find the galois group of x^5 - 1 over Q, and then for each subgroup of the galois group identify which subfield is fixed.


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The Attempt at a Solution


If w = exp(2*I*PI/5), then the roots not in Q are w, w^2, w^3, w^4. Its fairly easy to see by checking possible automorphisms that the Galois group is isomorphic to the multiplicative group of integers mod 5, which is in turn isomorphic to C4.

There may be a mistake there already.. but I'm not sure.

Here comes the confusion- C4 has one non-trivial proper subgroup, in this case found by multiplying only the elements w and w^4 together. But there are no intermediate fields as far as I can tell, since each root is primitive and so generates the other roots.

Please help! I've been teaching myself this course so I think I've probably just misunderstood something somewhere but not sure what..
 
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An intermediate field doesn't need to contain any root.
 
Ok... true. Will an intermediate field be one over which x^4 + x^3 + x^2 + x + 1 splits into two quadratics? or is the polynomial irrelevant for this...?
 
Think I've got it now- the intermediate field is Q(sqrt(5)) which is fixed by the subgroup {e,t} where e is the identity and t sends w to w^4, w^2 to w^3, that is, t is equivalent to complex conjugation.

Thank you!
 
Zoe-b said:
Think I've got it now- the intermediate field is Q(sqrt(5)) which is fixed by the subgroup {e,t} where e is the identity and t sends w to w^4, w^2 to w^3, that is, t is equivalent to complex conjugation.

Thank you!

This sounds right.

Zoe-b said:
Ok... true. Will an intermediate field be one over which x^4 + x^3 + x^2 + x + 1 splits into two quadratics? or is the polynomial irrelevant for this...?
I expect this to be true as well.
 
Fantastic- I have a more general question which as yet I've been unable to find the answer to in a textbook..
Does the galois group of a polynomial depend purely on its splitting field? Or is it in some way connected to the polynomial itself? For example, if two polynomials have different roots but the same splitting field, are their galois groups the same?
 
The definition I know of the Galois group of a polynomial is literally that it is the Galois group of the splitting field (over the relevant base field).
 
Ok thank you I thought that was the case but then got confused by questions where the splitting field seemed to be the same for different examples :)
 

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