In mathematics, the rootss of polynomials are in abstract algebra called algebraic elements. They can be created in a larger structure ('adjoined'), not simply found to exist in a given one.

More precisely, if L is a field extension of K then an element a of L is called an algebraic element over K, or just algebraic over K, if there exists some non-zero polynomial g(x) with coefficients in K such that g(a)=0. Elements of L which are not algebraic over K are called transcendental over K.

These notions generalize the algebraic numbers and the transcendental numbers (where the field extension is C/Q, C being the field of complex numbers and Q being the field of rational numbers).

Examples

  • The square root of 2 is algebraic over Q, since it is the root of the polynomial g(x) = x2 - 2 whose coefficients are rational.
  • Pi is transcendental over Q but algebraic over the field of real numbers R.

Properties

The following conditions are equivalent for an element a of L:

This characterization can be used to show that the sum, difference, product and quotient of algebraic elements over K are again algebraic over K. The set of all elements of L which are algebraic over K is a field that sits in between L and K.

If a is algebraic over K, then there are many non-zero polynomials g(x) with coefficients in K such that g(a) = 0. However there is a single one with smallest degree and with leading coefficient 1. This is the minimal polynomial of a and it encodes many important properties of a.

Fields that do not allow any algebraic elements over them (except their own elements) are called algebraically closed. The field of complex numbers is an example.