Upper bound for class number of field












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Suppose $K$ is a number field. Let $p$ be the smallest prime which is the norm of some principal ideal. It follows that every class in the ideal class group of $K$ contains some ideal of norm prime $q<p$.



Example of conjecture above:



The class number of the field $K=sqrt-271$ is $11$ and the smallest prime $p$ which is a norm of some principal ideal in $K$ is $307$. This means that every other class in the ideal class group of $K$ is generated by an ideal of norm $q$ NOT exceeding $307$. (Compare this to the Minkowski's bound).










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    2














    Suppose $K$ is a number field. Let $p$ be the smallest prime which is the norm of some principal ideal. It follows that every class in the ideal class group of $K$ contains some ideal of norm prime $q<p$.



    Example of conjecture above:



    The class number of the field $K=sqrt-271$ is $11$ and the smallest prime $p$ which is a norm of some principal ideal in $K$ is $307$. This means that every other class in the ideal class group of $K$ is generated by an ideal of norm $q$ NOT exceeding $307$. (Compare this to the Minkowski's bound).










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      Suppose $K$ is a number field. Let $p$ be the smallest prime which is the norm of some principal ideal. It follows that every class in the ideal class group of $K$ contains some ideal of norm prime $q<p$.



      Example of conjecture above:



      The class number of the field $K=sqrt-271$ is $11$ and the smallest prime $p$ which is a norm of some principal ideal in $K$ is $307$. This means that every other class in the ideal class group of $K$ is generated by an ideal of norm $q$ NOT exceeding $307$. (Compare this to the Minkowski's bound).










      share|cite|improve this question













      Suppose $K$ is a number field. Let $p$ be the smallest prime which is the norm of some principal ideal. It follows that every class in the ideal class group of $K$ contains some ideal of norm prime $q<p$.



      Example of conjecture above:



      The class number of the field $K=sqrt-271$ is $11$ and the smallest prime $p$ which is a norm of some principal ideal in $K$ is $307$. This means that every other class in the ideal class group of $K$ is generated by an ideal of norm $q$ NOT exceeding $307$. (Compare this to the Minkowski's bound).







      elementary-number-theory class-field-theory






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      asked Dec 4 '18 at 2:04









      J. LinneJ. Linne

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          Every number field with class number $> 1$ in which $2$ splits completely and the prime ideals above $2$ are principal is a counterexample. For a start, look at quadratic number fields generated by $sqrt{t^2-2}$; here $t + sqrt{t^2 - 2}$ has norm $2$. The first examples are ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{34})$ and ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{79})$.






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            Every number field with class number $> 1$ in which $2$ splits completely and the prime ideals above $2$ are principal is a counterexample. For a start, look at quadratic number fields generated by $sqrt{t^2-2}$; here $t + sqrt{t^2 - 2}$ has norm $2$. The first examples are ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{34})$ and ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{79})$.






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              Every number field with class number $> 1$ in which $2$ splits completely and the prime ideals above $2$ are principal is a counterexample. For a start, look at quadratic number fields generated by $sqrt{t^2-2}$; here $t + sqrt{t^2 - 2}$ has norm $2$. The first examples are ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{34})$ and ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{79})$.






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                Every number field with class number $> 1$ in which $2$ splits completely and the prime ideals above $2$ are principal is a counterexample. For a start, look at quadratic number fields generated by $sqrt{t^2-2}$; here $t + sqrt{t^2 - 2}$ has norm $2$. The first examples are ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{34})$ and ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{79})$.






                share|cite|improve this answer












                Every number field with class number $> 1$ in which $2$ splits completely and the prime ideals above $2$ are principal is a counterexample. For a start, look at quadratic number fields generated by $sqrt{t^2-2}$; here $t + sqrt{t^2 - 2}$ has norm $2$. The first examples are ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{34})$ and ${mathbb Q}(sqrt{79})$.







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                answered Dec 27 '18 at 18:46









                franz lemmermeyerfranz lemmermeyer

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