Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 March 2014
It has long been known that every free associative algebra can be embedded in a skew field [11]; in fact there are many different embeddings, all obtainable by specialization from the ‘universal field of fractions’ of the free algebra (cf. [5, Chapter 7]). This makes it reasonable to call the latter the free field; see §2 for precise definitions. The existence of this free field was first established by Amitsur [1], but his proof is rather indirect and does not provide anything like a normal form for the elements of the field. Actually one cannot expect to find such a normal form, since it does not even exist in the field of fractions of a commutative integral domain, but at least one can raise the word problem for free fields: Does there exist an algorithm for deciding whether a given expression for an element of the free field represents zero?
Now some recent work has revealed a more direct way of constructing free fields ([4], [5], [6]), and it is the object of this note to show how this method can be used to solve the word problem for free fields over infinite ground fields. In this connexion it is of interest to note that A. Macintyre [9] has shown that the word problem for skew fields is recursively unsolvable. Of course, every finitely generated commutative field has a solvable word problem (see e.g. [12]).
The construction of universal fields of fractions in terms of full matrices is briefly recalled in §2, and it is shown quite generally for a ring R with a field of fractions inverting all full matrices, that if the set of full matrices over R is recursive, then the universal field has a solvable word problem. This holds more generally if the precise set of matrices over R inverted over the field is recursive, but it seems difficult to exploit this more general statement.