Hermite–Minkowski theorem

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Short description: For any integer N there are only finitely many number fields with discriminant at most N

In mathematics, especially in algebraic number theory, the Hermite–Minkowski theorem states that for any integer N there are only finitely many number fields, i.e., finite field extensions K of the rational numbers Q, such that the discriminant of K/Q is at most N. The theorem is named after Charles Hermite and Hermann Minkowski.

This theorem is a consequence of the estimate for the discriminant

[math]\displaystyle{ \sqrt{|d_K|} \geq \frac{n^n}{n!}\left(\frac\pi4\right)^{n/2} }[/math]

where n is the degree of the field extension, together with Stirling's formula for n!. This inequality also shows that the discriminant of any number field strictly bigger than Q is not ±1, which in turn implies that Q has no unramified extensions.

References

Neukirch, Jürgen (1999). Algebraic Number Theory. Springer.  Section III.2