5
$\begingroup$

Wikipedia states that there is an equivalent definition of non-archimedean local fields: "it is a field that is complete with respect to a discrete valuation and whose residue field is finite." However, I'm unable to find any proof or reference for this.

In particular, I'm interested in the following problem: let $K$ be a non-archimedean local field of characteristic 0 (as per the conventional definition) which is a finite extension of $\mathbb Q_p$. How can one prove that $K$ is the completion of $L$ at some place $v$ for some number field $L$?

1 Answers 1

3

Regarding your first question: This is Proposition 1 in Section 1 of Chapter II of Serre's Local Fields.

Regarding the second question: This is a consequence of Krasner's Lemma.

  • 0
    +1 for mentioning Krasner's lemma - it's left out in far too many elementary texts on algebraic number theory, which is a pity because it's very easy to prove...2013-07-11
  • 0
    Though I should mention: some authors consider fields complete with respect to a discrete valuation, with a _perfect_ (not necessarily finite) residue field.2013-07-11