Ideal Theory
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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 ...
, ideal theory is the theory of ideals in
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. While the notion of an ideal exists also for non-commutative rings, a much more substantial theory exists only for commutative rings (and this article therefore only considers ideals in commutative rings.) Throughout the articles, rings refer to commutative rings. See also the article
ideal (ring theory) In mathematics, and more specifically in ring theory, an ideal of a ring is a special subset of its elements. Ideals generalize certain subsets of the integers, such as the even numbers or the multiples of 3. Addition and subtraction of even n ...
for basic operations such as sum or products of ideals.


Ideals in a finitely generated algebra over a field

Ideals in a finitely generated algebra over a field (that is, a quotient of a
polynomial ring In mathematics, especially in the field of algebra, a polynomial ring or polynomial algebra is a ring formed from the set of polynomials in one or more indeterminates (traditionally also called variables) with coefficients in another ring, ...
over a field) behave somehow nicer than those in a general commutative ring. First, in contrast to the general case, if A is a finitely generated algebra over a field, then the
radical of an ideal Radical (from Latin: ', root) may refer to: Politics and ideology Politics * Classical radicalism, the Radical Movement that began in late 18th century Britain and spread to continental Europe and Latin America in the 19th century * Radical politi ...
in A is the intersection of all maximal ideals containing the ideal (because A is a Jacobson ring). This may be thought of as an extension of
Hilbert's Nullstellensatz In mathematics, Hilbert's Nullstellensatz (German for "theorem of zeros", or more literally, "zero-locus-theorem") is a theorem that establishes a fundamental relationship between geometry and algebra. This relationship is the basis of algebraic ge ...
, which concerns the case when A is a polynomial ring.


Topology determined by an ideal

If ''I'' is an ideal in a ring ''A'', then it determines the topology on ''A'' where a subset ''U'' of ''A'' is open if, for each ''x'' in ''U'', :x + I^n \subset U. for some integer n > 0. This topology is called the ''I''-adic topology. It is also called an ''a''-adic topology if I = aA is generated by an element a. For example, take A = \mathbb, the ring of integers and I = pA an ideal generated by a prime number ''p''. For each integer x, define , x, _p = p^ when x = p^n y, y prime to p. Then, clearly, :x + p^n A = B(x, p^) where B(x, r) = \ denotes an open ball of radius r with center x. Hence, the p-adic topology on \mathbb is the same as the
metric space In mathematics, a metric space is a Set (mathematics), set together with a notion of ''distance'' between its Element (mathematics), elements, usually called point (geometry), points. The distance is measured by a function (mathematics), functi ...
topology given by d(x, y) = , x - y, _p. As a metric space, \mathbb can be completed. The resulting complete metric space has a structure of a ring that extended the ring structure of \mathbb; this ring is denoted as \mathbb_p and is called the ring of ''p''-adic integers.


Ideal class group

In a
Dedekind domain In mathematics, a Dedekind domain or Dedekind ring, named after Richard Dedekind, is an integral domain in which every nonzero proper ideal factors into a product of prime ideals. It can be shown that such a factorization is then necessarily un ...
''A'' (e.g., a ring of integers in a number field or the coordinate ring of a smooth affine curve) with the field of fractions K, an ideal I is invertible in the sense: there exists a
fractional ideal In mathematics, in particular commutative algebra, the concept of fractional ideal is introduced in the context of integral domains and is particularly fruitful in the study of Dedekind domains. In some sense, fractional ideals of an integral do ...
I^ (that is, an ''A''-submodule of K) such that I \, I^ = A, where the product on the left is a product of submodules of ''K''. In other words, fractional ideals form a group under a product. The quotient of the group of fractional ideals by the subgroup of principal ideals is then the
ideal class group In mathematics, the ideal class group (or class group) of an algebraic number field K is the quotient group J_K/P_K where J_K is the group of fractional ideals of the ring of integers of K, and P_K is its subgroup of principal ideals. The ...
of ''A''. In a general ring, an ideal may not be invertible (in fact, already the definition of a fractional ideal is not clear). However, over a Noetherian
integral domain In mathematics, 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 setting for studying divisibilit ...
, it is still possible to develop some theory generalizing the situation in Dedekind domains. For example, Ch. VII of Bourbaki's '' Algèbre commutative'' gives such a theory. The ideal class group of ''A'', when it can be defined, is closely related to the
Picard group In mathematics, the Picard group of a ringed space ''X'', denoted by Pic(''X''), is the group of isomorphism classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles) on ''X'', with the group operation being tensor product. This construction is a global ver ...
of the
spectrum A spectrum (: spectra or spectrums) is a set of related ideas, objects, or properties whose features overlap such that they blend to form a continuum. The word ''spectrum'' was first used scientifically in optics to describe the rainbow of co ...
of ''A'' (often the two are the same; e.g., for Dedekind domains). In
algebraic number In mathematics, an algebraic number is a number that is a root of a function, root of a non-zero polynomial in one variable with integer (or, equivalently, Rational number, rational) coefficients. For example, the golden ratio (1 + \sqrt)/2 is ...
theory, especially in
class field theory In mathematics, class field theory (CFT) is the fundamental branch of algebraic number theory whose goal is to describe all the abelian Galois extensions of local and global fields using objects associated to the ground field. Hilbert is credit ...
, it is more convenient to use a generalization of an ideal class group called an idele class group.


Closure operations

There are several operations on ideals that play roles of closures. The most basic one is the
radical of an ideal Radical (from Latin: ', root) may refer to: Politics and ideology Politics * Classical radicalism, the Radical Movement that began in late 18th century Britain and spread to continental Europe and Latin America in the 19th century * Radical politi ...
. Another is the integral closure of an ideal. Given an irredundant primary decomposition I = \cap Q_i, the intersection of Q_i's whose radicals are minimal (don’t contain any of the radicals of other Q_j's) is uniquely determined by I; this intersection is then called the unmixed part of I. It is also a closure operation. Given ideals I, J in a ring A, the ideal :(I : J^) = \ = \bigcup_ \operatorname_A((J^n + I)/I) is called the saturation of I with respect to J and is a closure operation (this notion is closely related to the study of local cohomology). See also tight closure.


Reduction theory


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 M be a module over a ring R and I an ideal. Then M determines the sheaf \widetilde on Y = \operatorname(R) - V(I) (the restriction to ''Y'' of the sheaf associated to ''M''). Unwinding the definition, one sees: :\Gamma_I(M) := \Gamma(Y, \widetilde) = \varinjlim \operatorname(I^n, M). Here, \Gamma_I(M) is called the ideal transform of M with respect to I.


See also

*
System of parameters In mathematics, a system of parameters for a local ring, local Noetherian ring of Krull dimension ''d'' with maximal ideal ''m'' is a set of elements ''x''1, ..., ''x'd'' that satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions: # ''m'' is a M ...


References

* * Eisenbud, David, ''Commutative Algebra with a View Toward Algebraic Geometry'', Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 150, Springer-Verlag, 1995, . * {{DEFAULTSORT:Ideal Theory Ideals (ring theory) History of mathematics Commutative algebra