Below we will focus attention on number fields leaving the function field case to the reader.
The following lemma essentially says that the denominator of an element of a global field is only ``nontrivial'' at a finite number of valuations.
Suppose now that is a finite extension of
, so
satisfies a monic polynomial
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Any valuation on a global field is either archimedean, or discrete
non-archimedean with finite residue class field, since this is true of
and
and is a property preserved by extending a valuation
to a finite extension of the base field. Hence it makes sense to talk
of normalized valuations. Recall that the normalized
-adic
valuation on
is
, and if
is a
valuation on a number field
equivalent to an extension of
, then the normalization of
is the composite of the
sequence of maps
There are two extensions of
to
,
since
,
as
. The image of
under each embedding into
is a unit in
, so
the normalized valuation of
is, in both
cases, equal to
. More generally, for any valuation
of
of characteristic an odd prime
, the
normalized valuation of
is
.
Since
in two ways, there are exactly
two normalized archimedean valuations on
, and
both of their values on
equal
.
Notice that the product of the absolute values of
with respect to all normalized valuations is
Let run through all normalized valuations of
(or of
),
and write
if the restriction of
to
is equivalent to
.
Then by Theorem 19.2.2,
By multiplicativity of valuations, if the theorem is true for and
then it is true for the product
and quotient
(when
). The theorem is clearly true for
, which has valuation
at all valuations. Thus to prove the theorem for
it suffices
to prove it when
is a prime number. Then we have
,
, and for primes
that
. Thus
If is a valuation on a field
, recall that
we let
denote the completion of
with respect to
. Also when
is non-archimedean, let
We will use the following lemma later (see Lemma 20.3.3) to prove that formation of the adeles of a global field is compatible with base change.
Since
for all
, the left hand side of
(20.1.2) is contained in the right hand side if
for
and
. Thus by Lemma 20.1.2, for all but finitely many
the left hand side of (20.1.2) is contained in the right
hand side. We have just eliminated the finitely many primes
corresponding to ``denominators'' of some
, and now only
consider
such that
for
all
.
For any elements
, consider the
discriminant
William Stein 2004-05-06