Evariste Galois (1811-1832) must rank pretty high on the all-time
list of moving last words. Galois was mortally wounded in a duel he
fought with Perscheux d\’Herbinville on May 30th 1832, the reason for
the duel not being clear but certainly linked to a girl called
Stephanie, whose name appears several times as a marginal note in
Galois\’ manuscripts (see illustration). When he died in the arms of his
younger brother Alfred he reportedly said “Ne pleure pas, j\’ai besoin
de tout mon courage pour mourir ‚àö‚Ć 20 ans”. In this series I\’ll
start with a pretty concrete problem in Galois theory and explain its
elegant solution by Aidan Schofield and Michel Van den Bergh.
Next, I\’ll rephrase the problem in non-commutative geometry lingo,
generalise it to absurd levels and finally I\’ll introduce a coalgebra
(yes, a co-algebra…) that explains it all. But, it will take some time
to get there. Start with your favourite basefield
characteristic zero (take
preference of your own). Take three elements
squares, then what conditions (if any) must be imposed on
dimension
that the three quadratic fieldextensions
algebra coproducts of index
505-517) that the only condition needed is that
In fact, they work a lot harder to prove that one can even take
to be a division algebra. They start with the algebra free
product
monstrous algebra. Take three letters
non-commutative words in
two consecutive
and the multiplication is induced by concatenation of words subject to
the simplifying relations
Next, they look
at the affine
parlance of
to the minimal primes of the level
Aidan and Michel worry a bit about reducedness of these components but
nowadays we know that
la Cuntz-Quillen or Kontsevich-Rosenberg) and hence all representation
varieties $\mathbf{rep}n A$ are smooth varieties (whence reduced) though
they may have several connected components. To determine the number of
irreducible (which in this case, is the same as connected) components
they use _Galois descent, that is, they consider the algebra
group free product
cannot resist the temptation to mention the tetrahedral snake problem
in relation to such groups. If one would have started with
fieldextensions one would get the free product
tetrahedra and glue them together along common faces so that any
tertrahedron is glued to maximum two others. In this way one forms a
tetrahedral-snake and the problem asks whether it is possible to make
such a snake having the property that the orientation of the
\’tail-tetrahedron\’ in
orientation of the \’head-tetrahedron\’. This is not possible and the
proof of it uses the fact that there are no non-trivial relations
between the four generators
the tetrahedron (in fact, there are no relations between these
reflections other than each has order two, so the subgroup generated by
these four reflections is the group
Stan Wagon\’s excellent book The Banach-tarski paradox, p.68-71.
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