In mathematics, in number theory, Gauss composition law is a rule, invented by Carl Friedrich Gauss, for performing a binary operation on integralbinary quadratic forms (IBQFs). Gauss presented this rule in his Disquisitiones Arithmeticae,[1] a textbook on number theory published in 1801, in Articles 234 - 244. Gauss composition law is one of the deepest results in the theory of IBQFs and Gauss's formulation of the law and the proofs its properties as given by Gauss are generally considered highly complicated and very difficult.[2] Several later mathematicians have simplified the formulation of the composition law and have presented it in a format suitable for numerical computations. The concept has also found generalisations in several directions.
An expression of the form , where are all integers, is called an integral binary quadratic form (IBQF). The form is called a primitive IBQF if are relatively prime. The quantity is called the discriminant of the IBQF . An integer is the discriminant of some IBQF if and only if . is called a fundamental discriminantif and only if one of the following statements holds
Two IBQFs and are said to be equivalent (or, properly equivalent) if there exist integers α, β, γ, δ such that
and
The notation is used to denote the fact that the two forms are equivalent. The relation "" is an equivalence relation in the set of all IBQFs. The equivalence class to which the IBQF belongs is denoted by .
Two IBQFs and are said to be improperly equivalent if
and
The relation in the set of IBQFs of being improperly equivalent is also an equivalence relation.
It can be easily seen that equivalent IBQFs (properly or improperly) have the same discriminant.
The following identity, called Brahmagupta identity, was known to the Indian mathematician Brahmagupta (598–668) who used it to calculate successively better fractional approximations to square roots of positive integers:
Writing this identity can be put in the form
where .
Gauss's composition law of IBQFs generalises this identity to an identity of the form where are all IBQFs and are linear combinations of the products .
Let be a fixed integer and consider set of all possible primitive IBQFs of discriminant . Let be the set of equivalence classes in this set under the equivalence relation "". Let and be two elements of . Let be a composite of the IBQFs and in . Then the following equation
The following sketch of the modern approach to the composition law of IBQFs is based on a monograph by Duncan A. Buell.[4] The book may be consulted for further details and for proofs of all the statements made hereunder.
Let be the set of integers. Hereafter, in this section, elements of will be referred as rational integers to distinguish them from algebraic integers to be defined below.
A complex number is called a quadratic algebraic number if it satisfies an equation of the form
where .
is called a quadratic algebraic integer if it satisfies an equation of the form
where
The quadratic algebraic numbers are numbers of the form
where and has no square factors other than .
The integer is called the radicand of the algebraic integer . The norm of the quadratic algebraic number is defined as
.
Let be the field of rational numbers. The smallest field containing and a quadratic algebraic number is the quadratic field containing and is denoted by . This field can be shown to be
The discriminant of the field is defined by
Let be a rational integer without square factors (except 1). The set of quadratic algebraic integers of radicand is denoted by . This set is given by
is a ring under ordinary addition and multiplication. If we let
Let be an ideal in the ring of integers ; that is, let be a nonempty subset of such that for any and any , . (An ideal as defined here is sometimes referred to as an integral ideal to distinguish from fractional ideal to be defined below.) If is an ideal in then one can find such any element in can be uniquely represented in the form with . Such a pair of elements in is called a basis of the ideal . This is indicated by writing . The norm of is defined as
.
The norm is independent of the choice of the basis.
The product of two ideals and , denoted by , is the ideal generated by the -linear combinations of .
A fractional ideal is a subset of the quadratic field for which the following two properties hold:
For any and for any , .
There exists a fixed algebraic integer such that for every , .
An ideal is called a principal ideal if there exists an algebraic integer such that . This principal ideal is denoted by .
There is this important result: "Given any ideal (integral or fractional) , there exists an integral ideal such that the product ideal is a principal ideal."
Two (integral or fractional) ideals and ares said to be equivalent, dented , if there is a principal ideal such that . These ideals are narrowly equivalent if the norm of is positive. The relation, in the set of ideals, of being equivalent or narrowly equivalent as defined here is indeed an equivalence relation.
The equivalence classes (respectively, narrow equivalence classes) of fractional ideals of a ring of quadratic algebraic integers form an abelian group under multiplication of ideals. The identity of the group is the class of all principal ideals (respectively, the class of all principal ideals with ). The groups of classes of ideals and of narrow classes of ideals are called the class group and the narrow class group of the .
Manjul Bhargava, a Canadian-American Fields Medal winning mathematician introduced a configuration, called a Bhargava cube, of eight integers (see figure) to study the composition laws of binary quadratic forms and other such forms. Defining matrices associated with the opposite faces of this cube as given below
,
Bhargava constructed three IBQFs as follows:
Bhargava established the following result connecting a Bhargava cube with the Gauss composition law:[5]
"If a cube A gives rise to three primitive binary quadratic forms Q1, Q2, Q3, then Q1, Q2, Q3 have the same discriminant, and the product of these three forms is the identity in the group defined by Gauss composition. Conversely, if Q1, Q2, Q3 are any three primitive binary quadratic forms of the same discriminant whose product is the identity under Gauss composition, then there exists a cube A yielding Q1, Q2, Q3."
^Carl Friedrich Gauss (English translation by Arthur A. Clarke) (1965). Disquisitiones Arithmeticae. Yale University Press. ISBN978-0300094732.
^D. Shanks (1989). Number theory and applications, volume 265 of NATO Adv. Sci. Inst. Ser. C Math. Phys. Sci. Dordrecht: Kluwer Acad. Publ. pp. 163–178, 179–204.
^Duncan A. Buell (1989). Binary Quadratic Forms: Classical Theory and Modern Computations. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 62–63. ISBN978-1-4612-8870-1.
^Duncan A. Buell (1989). Binary Quadratic Forms: Classical Theory and Modern Computations. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN978-1-4612-8870-1.
^Manjul Bhargava (2006). Higher composition laws and applications, in Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Madrid, Spain, 2006. European Mathematical Society.