A field is a commutative ring which contains a non-zero multiplicative identity and all non-zero elements have multiplicative inverses. Loosely, a field is a collection of entities with well-behaved and compatible addition and multiplication operations. A few examples serve to illustrate this point.
The characteristic of a field must be either 0 or a prime number p. A field of characteristic 0 is necessarily infinite.
Fields play an important role in nearly every area of mathematics, and are one of the most basic objects studied by algebra. The study of the relationships between different fields, and in particular subfields of a given field, leads to the study of Galois theory, and makes possible the proof of Abel's theorem and was one of the motivations for the early study of fields and abstract algebra more generally.
Technically, a field is a set of elements endowed with two binary operations, and (with properties analogous to addition and multiplication, respectively), which obey the following axioms:
Sometimes the condition 0 ≠ 1 is also included.
Categories: [Algebra]