Explicit Brauer Induction
Explicit Brauer Induction is an important technique in algebra, discovered by the author in 1986. It solves an old problem, giving a canonical formula for Brauer's induction theorem. In this 1994 book it is derived algebraically, following a method of R. Boltje - thereby making the technique, previously topological, accessible to algebraists. Once developed, the technique is used, by way of illustration, to re-prove some important known results in new ways and to settle some outstanding problems. As with Brauer's original result, the canonical formula can be expected to have numerous applications and this book is designed to introduce research algebraists to its possibilities. For example, the technique gives an improved construction of the Oliver–Taylor group-ring logarithm, which enables the author to study more effectively algebraic and number-theoretic questions connected with class-groups of rings.
- Algebraic treatment of Explicit Brauer Induction
- Five chapters of applications in many areas
- Many exercises and research problems
Reviews & endorsements
Review of the hardback: '… a good introduction to explicit Brauer induction and its arithmetic applications … it will be a valuable addition to the library of anyone working on these topics.' M.E. Keating, Mathematical Reviews
Product details
October 1994Hardback
9780521460156
424 pages
235 × 157 × 27 mm
0.73kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Representations
- 2. Induction theorems
- 3. GL2Fq
- 4. The class-group of a group-ring
- 5. A class-group miscellany
- 6. Complete discrete valuation fields
- 7. Galois module structure.