Limit this search to....

Maximal Orders
Contributor(s): Reiner, Irving (Author)
ISBN: 0198526733     ISBN-13: 9780198526735
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $228.00  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: March 2003
Qty:
Annotation: This is a reissue of a classic text, which includes the author's own corrections and provides a very accessible, self contained introduction to the classical theory of orders and maximal orders over a Dedekind ring. It starts wtih a long chapter that provides the algebraic prerequisites for
this theory, covering basic material on Dedekind domains, localizations and completions as well as semisimple rings and separable algebras. This is followed by an introduction to the basic tools in studying orders, such as reduced norms and traces, discriminants, and localization of orders. The
theory of maximal orders is then developed in the local case, first in a complete setting, and then over any discrete valuation ring. This paves the way to a chapter on the ideal theory in global maximal orders with detailed expositions on ideal classes, the jordan-Zassenhaus Theorum and genera.
This is followed by a chapter on Brauer groups and crossed product algebras, where Hasse's theory of cyclic algebras over local fields is presented in a clear and self-contained fashion. Assuming a couple of facts from class field theory, the book goes on to present the theory of simple algebras
over global fields covering in particular Eichler's Theorum on the ideal classes in a maximal order, as well as various results on the KO group and Picard group of orders. The rest of the book is devoted to a discussion of non-maximal orders, with particular emphasis on hereditary orders and group
rings. The ideas collected in this book have found important applications in the smooth representation theory of reductive p-adic groups. This text provides a useful introduction to this wide range of topics. It iswritten at a level suitable for beginning postgraduate students, is highly suited to
class teaching and provides a wealth of exercises.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Mathematics | Algebra - General
- Mathematics | Number Theory
- Language Arts & Disciplines | Linguistics - General
Dewey: 512.4
LCCN: 2003040457
Series: Mathematics
Physical Information: 0.94" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (1.66 lbs) 410 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This is a reissue of a classic text, which includes the author's own corrections and provides a very accessible, self contained introduction to the classical theory of orders and maximal orders over a Dedekind ring. It starts wtih a long chapter that provides the algebraic prerequisites for
this theory, covering basic material on Dedekind domains, localizations and completions as well as semisimple rings and separable algebras. This is followed by an introduction to the basic tools in studying orders, such as reduced norms and traces, discriminants, and localization of orders. The
theory of maximal orders is then developed in the local case, first in a complete setting, and then over any discrete valuation ring. This paves the way to a chapter on the ideal theory in global maximal orders with detailed expositions on ideal classes, the jordan-Zassenhaus Theorum and genera.
This is followed by a chapter on Brauer groups and crossed product algebras, where Hasse's theory of cyclic algebras over local fields is presented in a clear and self-contained fashion. Assuming a couple of facts from class field theory, the book goes on to present the theory of simple algebras
over global fields covering in particular Eichler's Theorum on the ideal classes in a maximal order, as well as various results on the KO group and Picard group of orders. The rest of the book is devoted to a discussion of non-maximal orders, with particular emphasis on hereditary orders and group
rings. The ideas collected in this book have found important applications in the smooth representation theory of reductive p-adic groups. This text provides a useful introduction to this wide range of topics. It is written at a level suitable for beginning postgraduate students, is highly suited to
class teaching and provides a wealth of exercises.