Math 511: Introduction to Algebraic Systems

Final Exam Solutions

Review for Test 1  Review for Test 2
 Review for Test 3   Review for Final

Test 1 Solutions

Test 2 Solutions

Test 3 Solutions

Todd Cochrane
 Fall 2006,  Ref 16920,  MWF 9:30 a.m., CW 131                 

Office: CW 209, MWF 10:30 - 11:30.
Phone: 532-0565
e-mail: cochrane@math.ksu.edu

Text:   An Introduction to Abstract Algebra with Notes to the Future Teacher,
            
by Olympia Nicodemi,  Melissa Sutherland and Gary Towsley,  Pearson, 2007.

Prerequisites:  Math 222 is listed, but little or no calculus will be assumed, just the
             mathematical maturity that develops from taking Calc I, II and III.
   
Advanced Help Session: MW 4:30-6:00, 6:30-7:30, Cardwell 144 (or 145)
Homework Grader:  Matthew Burkemper


Course Summary:   You have all been exposed to oodles of algebra from the time you
 were in middle school, Algebra I, II, III, Intermediate Algebra, College Algebra and so on.
This course will serve as a bridge between  what you learned in all of those courses and what
mathematicians today refer to as modern algebra or abstract algebra.  In modern algebra one
attempts to discover the common threads and patterns inherent in our familiar objects such
as integers and polynomials and then "abstract" them to a more general setting.

We begin the course with a brief introduction to Number Theory, the study of the natural numbers,
including the principal of induction, Euclidean algorithm, divisibility properties, factorization and
congruences.  Next we will look at familiar sets such as complex numbers, polynomials and matrices.
We'll learn about  rings,   fields and domains.    Finally we will study the
concept of groups, including permutation groups and groups of symmetries.

Content:  We will cover most of the material in the following sections of the book:
Chapter 1: Sections 1,2,3,4,6,7
Chapter 2: Sections 1,2,3,4,5,6
Chapter 3: Sections 1,2,4,5,6,7,9
Chapter 4: Sections 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,9
Chapter 5: Sections 1,2,4,6




Grading:  There will be weekly homework assignments,
the lowest of which will be dropped (the total will be scaled to 200 points),
three hourly exams worth 80 points each and a final exam worth
160 points.  Thus you may earn up to 600 points altogether. 

Important dates:
September 4, University Holiday
September 22, Test 1
October 2, University Holiday
October 27, Test 2
November 22-24, University Holiday
December 1, Test 3
December 13, 11:50 am - 1:40 pm,  Final Exam