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A few days ago I found this question here on math.stackexchange, which gave a sufficient criterion for a separable, algebraic extension $E/K$ to be an algebraic closure of $K$. However it was claimed by KCd, in a comment below the question I'm referring to, that we can drop the separability condition on the extension and still get the same result

My question is: how does the proof work in the non-separable case?

Put precisely: Let $E/K$ be an algebraic extension such that every non-constant polynomial in $K[X]$ has a root in $E$, then $E$ is the (up to isomorphism) algebraic closure of $K$.

It is pretty clear to me that Makotos proof in the separable case (which can be found on the page the link above is leading to) won't work for the case of a non-separable extension (e.g. because the primitive element theorem may fail). I had some ideas of working with the separable closure but didn't try much, because I didn't see a real perspective in my approach. In other words, I'm stuck.

Lastly an apology: I refrained from asking KCd this question directly because it might be of common interest.

Regards

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    @Nils , I've added an answer to your question.2012-06-17

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Let $\,E/K\,$ be not separable, so that $\,\operatorname{char} K=p>0\,$ . Then, $\,K^p\neq K\,$. Our basic assumption is that any non-constant polynomial in $\,K[x]\,$ has a root in $\,E\,$. Define $F:=\{x\in E\;|\;x^{p^n}\in K\,,\,\text{for some natural}\,\,n\}$

First exercise: Show that $\,F\,$ is a field and $\,K\leq F\leq E\,$.

Now, let us take $\,x\in F\,$, with say $\,\alpha=x^{p^n}\in K\Longrightarrow p(t):=t^{p^{n+1}}-\alpha\in K[t]\,$ . Our assumption is that $\exists w\in E\,\,s.t.\,\,p(w)=0\Longrightarrow x^{p^n}=w^{p^{n+1}}=\alpha\in K\Longrightarrow w\in F $

Second exercise: Prove that in fact $\,x=w^p\,$ and deduce that $\,F^p=F\,$ (i.e., $\,F\,$ is a perfect field)

Third exercise: Using our basic assumption, show that $\,E\,$ is perfect (hint: any irreducible polynomial over $\,E\,$ divides some irreducible pol. over $\,F\,$)

Let now $h(t):=\sum_{i=0}^kc_it^i\in F[t]\Longrightarrow \,\exists N\in\mathbb{N}\,\,s.t.\,\,c_i^{p^N}\in K\Longrightarrow g(t)=\sum_{i=0}^kc_i^{p^N}t^i\in K[t]$and our basic assumption says $\,\exists\,z\in E\,\,s.t.\,\,g(z)=0\,$ .

Finally, since $\,E^{p^n}=E\,\,\,\forall n\in\mathbb{N}\,$ (why?) , we have that $\,z=r^{p^n}\,,\,\text{for some}\,n\in\mathbb{N}\,,\,r\in E$

Fourth exercise: Prove that $\,h(t)\,$ has a root in $\,E\,$, ending thus the proof.

(Hint: Use Freshman's Dream Theorem: $(a+b+c+...)^{p^k}=a^{p^k}+b^{p^k}+c^{p^k}+...$ when working in fields with characteristic $\,p$. Of course, the sum above is finite)

The above is not original. I remember this (as it stunned me as it theoretically simplifies the proof I knew about the existence of an alg. closed overfield for any field) from some answer given by K. Conrad, who based it on some paper by Gilmer, if I remember correctly.

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    @DonAntonio can u please tell me a counter example which shows this statement is false if $E|K$ is not necessarily algebraic?2014-10-24