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number > number theory > analytic number theory > Brauer-Siegel theorem

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Brauer-Siegel theorem  

Definition

  • In mathematics, the Brauer–Siegel theorem, named after Richard Brauer and Carl Ludwig Siegel, is an asymptotic result on the behaviour of algebraic number fields, obtained by Richard Brauer and Carl Ludwig Siegel. It attempts to generalise the results known on the class numbers of imaginary quadratic fields, to a more general sequence of number fields
    In all cases other than the rational field Q and imaginary quadratic fields, the regulator Ri of Ki must be taken into account, because Ki then has units of infinite order by Dirichlet's unit theorem. The quantitative hypothesis of the standard Brauer–Siegel theorem is that if Di is the discriminant of Ki, then
    Assuming that, and the algebraic hypothesis that Ki is a Galois extension of Q, the conclusion is that
    where hi is the class number of Ki. If one assumes that all the degrees are bounded above by a uniform constant N, then one may drop the assumption of normality - this is what is actually proved in Brauer's paper.
    (Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brauer%E2%80%93Siegel_theorem)

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http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/PSR-HHBS82VH-H

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