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Advanced Modern Algebra: Second Edition
Joseph J. Rotman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, IL
cover
Graduate Studies in Mathematics
2010; approx. 1015 pp; hardcover
Volume: 114
ISBN-10: 0-8218-4741-4
ISBN-13: 978-0-8218-4741-1
List Price: US$99
Member Price: US$79
Order Code: GSM/114
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Not yet published.
Expected publication date is August 26, 2010.
See also:

Algebra: Chapter 0 - Paolo Aluffi

Algebra: A Graduate Course - I Martin Isaacs

A Course in Algebra - E B Vinberg

A Course in Algebra - E B Vinberg

This book is designed as a text for the first year of graduate algebra, but it can also serve as a reference since it contains more advanced topics as well. This second edition has a different organization than the first. It begins with a discussion of the cubic and quartic equations, which leads into permutations, group theory, and Galois theory (for finite extensions; infinite Galois theory is discussed later in the book). The study of groups continues with finite abelian groups (finitely generated groups are discussed later, in the context of module theory), Sylow theorems, simplicity of projective unimodular groups, free groups and presentations, and the Nielsen-Schreier theorem (subgroups of free groups are free).

The study of commutative rings continues with prime and maximal ideals, unique factorization, noetherian rings, Zorn's lemma and applications, varieties, and Gröbner bases. Next, noncommutative rings and modules are discussed, treating tensor product, projective, injective, and flat modules, categories, functors, and natural transformations, categorical constructions (including direct and inverse limits), and adjoint functors. Then follow group representations: Wedderburn-Artin theorems, character theory, theorems of Burnside and Frobenius, division rings, Brauer groups, and abelian categories. Advanced linear algebra treats canonical forms for matrices and the structure of modules over PIDs, followed by multilinear algebra.

Homology is introduced, first for simplicial complexes, then as derived functors, with applications to Ext, Tor, and cohomology of groups, crossed products, and an introduction to algebraic $K$-theory. Finally, the author treats localization, Dedekind rings and algebraic number theory, and homological dimensions. The book ends with the proof that regular local rings have unique factorization.

Readership

Graduate students interested in algebra.

Reviews

About the First Edition:

"... a highly welcome enhancement to the existing textbook literature in the field of algebra."

-- Zentralblatt fur Mathematik

Table of Contents

  • Groups I
  • Commutative rings I
  • Fields
  • Groups II
  • Commutative rings II
  • Rings
  • Representation theory
  • Advanced linear algebra
  • Homology
  • Commutative rings III
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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