In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, more specifically in
ring theory, local rings are certain
rings that are comparatively simple, and serve to describe what is called "local behaviour", in the sense of functions defined on
algebraic varieties or
manifolds, or of
algebraic number fields examined at a particular
place, or prime. Local algebra is the branch of
commutative algebra that studies
commutative
In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Perhaps most familiar as a pr ...
local rings and their
modules.
In practice, a commutative local ring often arises as the result of the
localization of a ring at a
prime ideal.
The concept of local rings was introduced by
Wolfgang Krull in 1938 under the name ''Stellenringe''.
[
] The English term ''local ring'' is due to
Zariski.
[
]
Definition and first consequences
A
ring ''R'' is a local ring if it has any one of the following equivalent properties:
* ''R'' has a unique
maximal left
ideal.
* ''R'' has a unique maximal right ideal.
* 1 ≠ 0 and the sum of any two non-
units in ''R'' is a non-unit.
* 1 ≠ 0 and if ''x'' is any element of ''R'', then ''x'' or is a unit.
* If a finite sum is a unit, then it has a term that is a unit (this says in particular that the empty sum cannot be a unit, so it implies 1 ≠ 0).
If these properties hold, then the unique maximal left ideal coincides with the unique maximal right ideal and with the ring's
Jacobson radical. The third of the properties listed above says that the set of non-units in a local ring forms a (proper) ideal, necessarily contained in the Jacobson radical. The fourth property can be paraphrased as follows: a ring ''R'' is local if and only if there do not exist two
coprime proper (
principal) (left) ideals, where two ideals ''I''
1, ''I''
2 are called ''coprime'' if .
In the case of
commutative ring
In mathematics, a commutative ring is a Ring (mathematics), ring in which the multiplication operation is commutative. The study of commutative rings is called commutative algebra. Complementarily, noncommutative algebra is the study of ring prope ...
s, one does not have to distinguish between left, right and two-sided ideals: a commutative ring is local if and only if it has a unique maximal ideal.
Before about 1960 many authors required that a local ring be (left and right)
Noetherian, and (possibly non-Noetherian) local rings were called quasi-local rings. In this article this requirement is not imposed.
A local ring that is an
integral domain is called a local domain.
Examples
*All
fields (and
skew fields) are local rings, since is the only maximal ideal in these rings.
*The ring
is a local ring ( prime, ). The unique maximal ideal consists of all multiples of .
*More generally, a nonzero ring in which every element is either a unit or
nilpotent is a local ring.
*An important class of local rings are
discrete valuation rings, which are local
principal ideal domains that are not fields.
*The ring
, whose elements are infinite series
where multiplications are given by
such that
, is local. Its unique maximal ideal consists of all elements that are not invertible. In other words, it consists of all elements with constant term zero.
*More generally, every ring of
formal power series over a local ring is local; the maximal ideal consists of those power series with
constant term in the maximal ideal of the base ring.
*Similarly, the
algebra of
dual numbers over any field is local. More generally, if ''F'' is a local ring and ''n'' is a positive integer, then the
quotient ring ''F''
'X''(''X''
''n'') is local with maximal ideal consisting of the classes of polynomials with constant term belonging to the maximal ideal of ''F'', since one can use a
geometric series to invert all other polynomials
modulo ''X''
''n''. If ''F'' is a field, then elements of ''F''
'X''(''X''
''n'') are either
nilpotent or
invertible. (The dual numbers over ''F'' correspond to the case .)
*Nonzero quotient rings of local rings are local.
*The ring of
rational numbers with
odd denominator is local; its maximal ideal consists of the fractions with even numerator and odd denominator. It is the integers
localized at 2.
*More generally, given any
commutative ring
In mathematics, a commutative ring is a Ring (mathematics), ring in which the multiplication operation is commutative. The study of commutative rings is called commutative algebra. Complementarily, noncommutative algebra is the study of ring prope ...
''R'' and any
prime ideal ''P'' of ''R'', the
localization of ''R'' at ''P'' is local; the maximal ideal is the ideal generated by ''P'' in this localization; that is, the maximal ideal consists of all elements ''a''/''s'' with ''a'' ∈ ''P'' and ''s'' ∈ ''R'' - ''P''.
Non-examples
*The
ring of polynomials