Welcome

Welcome to the course web page for the Spring 2016 manifestation of MAT 612: Abstract Algebra II at Northern Arizona University. The course will focus on rings, modules, field extensions, Galois theory, as well as advanced topics in group theory.

Course Info

Title: MAT 612: Abstract Algebra II
Semester: Spring 2016
Credits: 3
Section: 1
Time: MWF at 9:10-10:00AM
Location: AMB 207

Instructor Info

  Dana C. Ernst, PhD
  AMB 176
  11:15-12:15 MWF and 9-10 TTh (or by appointment)
  dana.ernst@nau.edu
  928.523.6852
  dcernst.github.io/teaching/mat612s16


Dana C. Ernst

Mathematics & Teaching

  Northern Arizona University
  Flagstaff, AZ
  Website
  928.523.6852
  Twitter
  Instagram
  Facebook
  Strava
  GitHub
  arXiv
  ResearchGate
  LinkedIn
  Mendeley
  Google Scholar
  Impact Story
  ORCID

Current Courses

  MAT 226: Discrete Math
  MAT 690: CGT

About This Site

  This website was created using GitHub Pages and Jekyll together with Twitter Bootstrap.

  Unless stated otherwise, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International License.

  The views expressed on this site are my own and are not necessarily shared by my employer Northern Arizona University.

  The source code is on GitHub.

Land Acknowledgement

  Flagstaff and NAU sit at the base of the San Francisco Peaks, on homelands sacred to Native Americans throughout the region. The Peaks, which includes Humphreys Peak (12,633 feet), the highest point in Arizona, have religious significance to several Native American tribes. In particular, the Peaks form the Diné (Navajo) sacred mountain of the west, called Dook'o'oosłííd, which means "the summit that never melts". The Hopi name for the Peaks is Nuva'tukya'ovi, which translates to "place-of-snow-on-the-very-top". The land in the area surrounding Flagstaff is the ancestral homeland of the Hopi, Ndee/Nnēē (Western Apache), Yavapai, A:shiwi (Zuni Pueblo), and Diné (Navajo). We honor their past, present, and future generations, who have lived here for millennia and will forever call this place home.