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In
abstract algebra In mathematics, more specifically algebra, abstract algebra or modern algebra is the study of algebraic structures. Algebraic structures include groups, rings, fields, modules, vector spaces, lattices, and algebras over a field. The te ...
, a completion is any of several related functors on rings and modules that result in complete topological rings and modules. Completion is similar to localization, and together they are among the most basic tools in analysing commutative rings. Complete commutative rings have a simpler structure than general ones, and Hensel's lemma applies to them. In algebraic geometry, a completion of a ring of functions ''R'' on a space ''X'' concentrates on a formal neighborhood of a point of ''X'': heuristically, this is a neighborhood so small that ''all'' Taylor series centered at the point are convergent. An algebraic completion is constructed in a manner analogous to completion of a metric space with Cauchy sequences, and agrees with it in the case when ''R'' has a metric given by a non-Archimedean absolute value.


General construction

Suppose that ''E'' is an
abelian group In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is com ...
with a descending filtration : E = F^0 E \supset F^1 E \supset F^2 E \supset \cdots \, of subgroups. One then defines the completion (with respect to the filtration) as the inverse limit: : \widehat = \varprojlim (E/F^n E). \, This is again an abelian group. Usually ''E'' is an ''additive'' abelian group. If ''E'' has additional algebraic structure compatible with the filtration, for instance ''E'' is a filtered ring, a filtered module, or a filtered
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set whose elements, often called '' vectors'', may be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called '' scalars''. Scalars are often real numbers, but ...
, then its completion is again an object with the same structure that is complete in the topology determined by the filtration. This construction may be applied both to commutative and noncommutative rings. As may be expected, when the intersection of the F^i E equals zero, this produces a complete topological ring.


Krull topology

In
commutative algebra Commutative algebra, first known as ideal theory, is the branch of algebra that studies commutative rings, their ideals, and modules over such rings. Both algebraic geometry and algebraic number theory build on commutative algebra. Promi ...
, the filtration on a commutative ring ''R'' by the powers of a proper ideal ''I'' determines the Krull (after Wolfgang Krull) or ''I''- adic topology on ''R''. The case of a ''maximal'' ideal I=\mathfrak is especially important, for example the distinguished maximal ideal of a valuation ring. The basis of open neighbourhoods of 0 in ''R'' is given by the powers ''I''''n'', which are ''nested'' and form a descending filtration on ''R'': : F^0 R = R\supset I\supset I^2\supset\cdots, \quad F^n R = I^n. (Open neighborhoods of any ''r'' ∈ ''R'' are given by cosets ''r'' + ''I''''n''.) The completion is the inverse limit of the factor rings, : \widehat_I=\varprojlim (R/I^n) pronounced "R I hat". The kernel of the canonical map from the ring to its completion is the intersection of the powers of ''I''. Thus is injective if and only if this intersection reduces to the zero element of the ring; by the Krull intersection theorem, this is the case for any commutative Noetherian ring which is an
integral domain In mathematics, specifically abstract algebra, an integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring in which the product of any two nonzero elements is nonzero. Integral domains are generalizations of the ring of integers and provide a natural s ...
or a local ring. There is a related topology on ''R''-modules, also called Krull or ''I''- adic topology. A basis of open neighborhoods of a module ''M'' is given by the sets of the form :x + I^n M \quad\textx \in M. The completion of an ''R''-module ''M'' is the inverse limit of the quotients : \widehat_I=\varprojlim (M/I^n M). This procedure converts any module over ''R'' into a complete
topological module In mathematics, a topological module is a module over a topological ring such that scalar multiplication and addition are continuous. Examples A topological vector space is a topological module over a topological field. An abelian topologi ...
over \widehat_I.


Examples

* The ring of ''p''-adic integers \Z_p is obtained by completing the ring \Z of integers at the ideal (''p''). * Let ''R'' = ''K'' 'x''1,...,''x''''n''be the polynomial ring in ''n'' variables over a field ''K'' and \mathfrak=(x_1,\ldots,x_n) be the maximal ideal generated by the variables. Then the completion \widehat_ is the ring ''K'' ''x''1,...,''x''''n'' of formal power series in ''n'' variables over ''K''. * Given a noetherian ring R and an ideal I = (f_1,\ldots, f_n), the I-adic completion of R is an image of a formal power series ring, specifically, the image of the surjection ::\begin R x_1, \ldots, x_n \to \widehat_I \\ x_i \mapsto f_i \end :The kernel is the ideal (x_1 - f_1, \ldots, x_n - f_n). Completions can also be used to analyze the local structure of singularities of a scheme. For example, the affine schemes associated to \Complex ,y(xy) and the nodal cubic plane curve \Complex ,y(y^2 - x^2(1+x)) have similar looking singularities at the origin when viewing their graphs (both look like a plus sign). Notice that in the second case, any Zariski neighborhood of the origin is still an irreducible curve. If we use completions, then we are looking at a "small enough" neighborhood where the node has two components. Taking the localizations of these rings along the ideal (x,y) and completing gives \Complex x,y/(xy) and \Complex x,y/((y+u)(y-u)) respectively, where u is the formal square root of x^2(1+x) in \Complex x,y. More explicitly, the power series: :u = x\sqrt = \sum_^\infty \fracx^. Since both rings are given by the intersection of two ideals generated by a homogeneous degree 1 polynomial, we can see algebraically that the singularities "look" the same. This is because such a scheme is the union of two non-equal linear subspaces of the affine plane.


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