Krull's principal ideal theorem

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Template:Short description In commutative algebra, Krull's principal ideal theorem, named after Wolfgang Krull (1899โ€“1971), gives a bound on the height of a principal ideal in a commutative Noetherian ring. The theorem is sometimes referred to by its German name, Krulls Hauptidealsatz (from Template:Wikt-lang ("Principal") + Template:Wikt-lang + Template:Wikt-lang ("theorem")).

Precisely, if R is a Noetherian ring and I is a principal, proper ideal of R, then each minimal prime ideal containing I has height at most one.

This theorem can be generalized to ideals that are not principal, and the result is often called Krull's height theorem. This says that if R is a Noetherian ring and I is a proper ideal generated by n elements of R, then each minimal prime over I has height at most n. The converse is also true: if a prime ideal has height n, then it is a minimal prime ideal over an ideal generated by n elements.[1]

The principal ideal theorem and the generalization, the height theorem, both follow from the fundamental theorem of dimension theory in commutative algebra (see also below for the direct proofs). Bourbaki's Commutative Algebra gives a direct proof. Kaplansky's Commutative Rings includes a proof due to David Rees.

Proofs

Proof of the principal ideal theorem

Let A be a Noetherian ring, x an element of it and ๐”ญ a minimal prime over x. Replacing A by the localization A๐”ญ, we can assume A is local with the maximal ideal ๐”ญ. Let ๐”ฎโŠŠ๐”ญ be a strictly smaller prime ideal and let ๐”ฎ(n)=๐”ฎnA๐”ฎโˆฉA, which is a ๐”ฎ-primary ideal called the n-th symbolic power of ๐”ฎ. It forms a descending chain of ideals AโŠƒ๐”ฎโŠƒ๐”ฎ(2)โŠƒ๐”ฎ(3)โŠƒโ‹ฏ. Thus, there is the descending chain of ideals ๐”ฎ(n)+(x)/(x) in the ring Aโ€พ=A/(x). Now, the radical (x) is the intersection of all minimal prime ideals containing x; ๐”ญ is among them. But ๐”ญ is a unique maximal ideal and thus (x)=๐”ญ. Since (x) contains some power of its radical, it follows that Aโ€พ is an Artinian ring and thus the chain ๐”ฎ(n)+(x)/(x) stabilizes and so there is some n such that ๐”ฎ(n)+(x)=๐”ฎ(n+1)+(x). It implies:

๐”ฎ(n)=๐”ฎ(n+1)+x๐”ฎ(n),

from the fact ๐”ฎ(n) is ๐”ฎ-primary (if y is in ๐”ฎ(n), then y=z+ax with zโˆˆ๐”ฎ(n+1) and aโˆˆA. Since ๐”ญ is minimal over x, xโˆˆ̸๐”ฎ and so axโˆˆ๐”ฎ(n) implies a is in ๐”ฎ(n).) Now, quotienting out both sides by ๐”ฎ(n+1) yields ๐”ฎ(n)/๐”ฎ(n+1)=(x)๐”ฎ(n)/๐”ฎ(n+1). Then, by Nakayama's lemma (which says a finitely generated module M is zero if M=IM for some ideal I contained in the radical), we get M=๐”ฎ(n)/๐”ฎ(n+1)=0; i.e., ๐”ฎ(n)=๐”ฎ(n+1) and thus ๐”ฎnA๐”ฎ=๐”ฎn+1A๐”ฎ. Using Nakayama's lemma again, ๐”ฎnA๐”ฎ=0 and A๐”ฎ is an Artinian ring; thus, the height of ๐”ฎ is zero. โ—ป

Proof of the height theorem

Krullโ€™s height theorem can be proved as a consequence of the principal ideal theorem by induction on the number of elements. Let x1,,xn be elements in A, ๐”ญ a minimal prime over (x1,,xn) and ๐”ฎโŠŠ๐”ญ a prime ideal such that there is no prime strictly between them. Replacing A by the localization A๐”ญ we can assume (A,๐”ญ) is a local ring; note we then have ๐”ญ=(x1,,xn). By minimality of ๐”ญ, it follows that ๐”ฎ cannot contain all the xi; relabeling the subscripts, say, x1โˆˆ̸๐”ฎ. Since every prime ideal containing ๐”ฎ+(x1) is between ๐”ฎ and ๐”ญ, ๐”ฎ+(x1)=๐”ญ and thus we can write for each iโ‰ฅ2,

xiri=yi+aix1

with yiโˆˆ๐”ฎ and aiโˆˆA. Now we consider the ring Aโ€พ=A/(y2,,yn) and the corresponding chain ๐”ฎโ€พโŠ‚๐”ญโ€พ in it. If ๐”ฏโ€พ is a minimal prime over x1โ€พ, then ๐”ฏ contains x1,x2r2,,xnrn and thus ๐”ฏ=๐”ญ; that is to say, ๐”ญโ€พ is a minimal prime over x1โ€พ and so, by Krullโ€™s principal ideal theorem, ๐”ฎโ€พ is a minimal prime (over zero); ๐”ฎ is a minimal prime over (y2,,yn). By inductive hypothesis, ht(๐”ฎ)โ‰คnโˆ’1 and thus ht(๐”ญ)โ‰คn. โ—ป

References

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