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Ideal theory

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In mathematics, ideal theory is the theory of ideals in commutative rings; and is the precursor name for the contemporary subject of commutative algebra. The name grew out of the central considerations, such as the Lasker–Noether theorem in algebraic geometry, and the ideal class group in algebraic number theory, of the commutative algebra of the first quarter of the twentieth century. It was used in the influential van der Waerden text on abstract algebra from around 1930.

The ideal theory in question had been based on elimination theory, but in line with David Hilbert's taste moved away from algorithmic methods. Gröbner basis theory has now reversed the trend, for computer algebra.

The importance of the idea of a module, more general than an ideal, probably led to the perception that ideal theory was too narrow a description. Valuation theory, too, was an important technical extension, and was used by Helmut Hasse and Oscar Zariski. Bourbaki used commutative algebra; sometimes local algebra is applied to the theory of local rings. Douglas Northcott's 1953 Cambridge Tract Ideal Theory (reissued 2004 under the same title) was one of the final appearances of the name.

Topology determined by an ideal

Let R be a ring and M an R-module. Then each ideal of R determines a topology on M called the -adic topology such that a subset U of M is open if and only if for each x in U there exists a positive integer n such that

With respect to this -adic topology, is a basis of neighbourhoods of and makes the module operations continuous; in particular, is a possibly non-Hausdorff topological group. Also, M is a Hausdorff topological space if and only if Moreover, when is Hausdorff, the topology is the same as the metric space topology given by defining the distance function: for , where is an integer such that .

Given a submodule N of M, the -closure of N in M is equal to , as shown easily.

Now, a priori, on a submodule N of M, there are two natural -topologies: the subspace topology induced by the -adic topology on M and the -adic topology on N. However, when is Noetherian and is finite over it, those two topologies coincide as a consequence of the Artin–Rees lemma.

When is Hausdorff, can be completed as a metric space; the resulting space is denoted by and has the module structure obtained by extending the module operations by continuity. It is also the same as (or canonically isomorphic to):

where the right-hand side is the completion of the module with respect to .

Example: Let be a polynomial ring over a field and the maximal ideal. Then is a formal power series ring.

R is called a Zariski ring with respect to if every ideal in R is -closed. There is a characterization:

R is a Zariski ring with respect to if and only if is contained in the Jacobson radical of R.

In particular a Noetherian local ring is a Zariski ring with respect to the maximal ideal.

Reduction theory

The reduction theory goes back to the influential 1954 paper by Northcott and Rees, the paper that introduced the basic notions. In algebraic geometry, the theory is among the essential tools to extract detailed information about the behaviors of blow-ups.

Given ideals JI in a ring R, the ideal J is said to be a reduction of I if there is some integer m > 0 such that .[1] For such ideals, immediately from the definition, the following hold:

  • For any k, .
  • J and I have the same radical and the same set of minimal prime ideals over them[2] (the converse is false).

If R is a Noetherian ring, then J is a reduction of I if and only if the Rees algebra R[It] is finite over R[Jt].[3] (This is the reason for the relation to a blow up.)

A closely related notion is that of analytic spread. By definition, the fiber cone ring of a Noetherian local ring (R, ) along an ideal I is

.

The Krull dimension of is called the analytic spread of I. Given a reduction , the minimum number of generators of J is at least the analytic spread of I.[4] Also, a partial converse holds for infinite fields: if is infinite and if the integer is the analytic spread of I, then each reduction of I contains a reduction generated by elements.[5]

Local cohomology in ideal theory

Local cohomology can sometimes be used to obtain information on an ideal. This section assumes some familiarity with sheaf theory and scheme theory.

Let be a module over a ring and an ideal. Then determines the sheaf on (the restriction to Y of the sheaf associated to M). Unwinding the definition, one sees:

.

Here, is called the ideal transform of with respect to .[6]

References

  1. ^ Huneke & Swanson 2006, Definition 1.2.1
  2. ^ Huneke & Swanson 2006, Lemma 8.1.10
  3. ^ Huneke & Swanson 2006, Theorem 8.2.1.
  4. ^ Huneke & Swanson 2006, Corollary 8.2.5.
  5. ^ Huneke & Swanson 2006, Proposition 8.3.7
  6. ^ Eisenbud 2005, Appendix 10B.
  • Atiyah, Michael Francis; Macdonald, I.G. (1969), Introduction to Commutative Algebra, Westview Press, ISBN 978-0-201-40751-8
  • Eisenbud, David, Commutative Algebra with a View Toward Algebraic Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 150, Springer-Verlag, 1995, ISBN 0-387-94268-8.
  • Huneke, Craig; Swanson, Irena (2006), Integral closure of ideals, rings, and modules, London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series, vol. 336, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-68860-4, MR 2266432