12-240/Fields' Further proof
12-240/Classnotes for Thursday September 13 12-240/Classnotes for Tuesday September 11
In the first class, Professor says something about particular fields. Forgive me, because I am an international student, if I can not express information precisely.
About: F(n) F(1) F(2) and F(3) are a field, but F(4) is not. Professor said that any number N which is not a prime number can not "form" a field.
If you do not understand what the F(n) means, you can look through the file "12-240/Classnotes for Tuesday September 11"
Here is the proof.
If we have a field F(n), and n=a*b (a,b,n∈ N*, a,b≠1)
IN defination of multiplication
- 0 1 2 3 .......... b.......n-1
0 . . . . ......................
1 . . . . ......................
2 . . . . ......................
3 . . . . .......................
4 . . . . .......................
. . . . . .......................
a 0 (a) (2a) (3a)...........(a*b).....(n-1)*a ( in this row, every element mod n)
....................................
....................................
......................................
.....................................
n-1..................................
see the (a+1)th row
There must be a "1" in this row, actually each row or column, to meet the rule :Existence of Negatives/Inverses.
So if F(n) is a field, then
1.m*a=k*n+1 (k,m∈N*, m<n) there must exist k,m. 2.n=ab
==>>m*a=k*a*b+1 (a≠1)
==>>m=k*b+1/a
unless a=1
m will not exist, because m should be an integer. so F(n), when n is not a prime number, is not a field.
There is a large need for me to improve my format. Editing is welcomed.
PS: But till now, there are still some questions existing. How can we prove that a prime number N can absolutely form a field? Is there any exception? I am still working on it. ----Michael.Wang