Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of symbols used in the text
- 1 Basics of constructive algebraic number theory
- 2 The group of an equation
- 3 Methods from the geometry of numbers
- 4 Embedding of commutative orders into the maximal order
- 5 Units in algebraic number fields
- 6 The class group of algebraic number fields
- 7 Recent developments
- Appendix: Numerical tables
- Algorithms
- References
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of symbols used in the text
- 1 Basics of constructive algebraic number theory
- 2 The group of an equation
- 3 Methods from the geometry of numbers
- 4 Embedding of commutative orders into the maximal order
- 5 Units in algebraic number fields
- 6 The class group of algebraic number fields
- 7 Recent developments
- Appendix: Numerical tables
- Algorithms
- References
- Index
Summary
This book is a first step in a new direction: to modify existing theory from a constructive point of view and to stimulate the readers to make their own computational experiments. We are thoroughly convinced that their observations will help to build a new basis from which to venture into new theory on algebraic numbers. History shows that in the long run, number theory always followed the cyclic movement from theory to construction to experiment to conjecture to theory.
Consequently, this book is addressed to all lovers of number theory. On the one hand, it gives a comprehensive introduction to (constructive) algebraic number theory and is therefore especially suited as a textbook for a course on that subject. On the other hand, many parts go far beyond an introduction and make the user familiar with recent research in the field. For experimental number theoreticians we developed new methods and obtained new results (e.g., in the tables at the end of the book) of great importance for them. Both computer scientists interested in higher arithmetic and in the basic makeup of digital computers, and amateurs and teachers liking algebraic number theory will find the book of value.
Many parts of the book have been tested in courses independently by both authors. However, the outcome is not presented in the form of lectures, but, rather, in the form of developed methods and problems to be solved. Algorithms occur frequently throughout the presentation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Algorithmic Algebraic Number Theory , pp. vii - ixPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989