Noether normalization lemma

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In mathematics, the Noether normalization lemma is a result of commutative algebra, introduced by Emmy Noether in 1926.[1] It states that for any field k, and any finitely generated commutative k-algebra A, there exist elements y1, y2, ..., yd in A that are algebraically independent over k and such that A is a finitely generated module over the polynomial ring S = kTemplate:Hair space[y1, y2, ..., yd]. The integer d is equal to the Krull dimension of the ring A; and if A is an integral domain, d is also the transcendence degree of the field of fractions of A over k.

The theorem has a geometric interpretation. Suppose A is the coordinate ring of an affine variety X, and consider S as the coordinate ring of a d-dimensional affine space 𝔸kd. Then the inclusion map Sβ†ͺA induces a surjective finite morphism of affine varieties X→𝔸kd: that is, any affine variety is a branched covering of affine space. When k is infinite, such a branched covering map can be constructed by taking a general projection from an affine space containing X to a d-dimensional subspace.

More generally, in the language of schemes, the theorem can equivalently be stated as: every affine k-scheme (of finite type) X is finite over an affine n-dimensional space. The theorem can be refined to include a chain of ideals of R (equivalently, closed subsets of X) that are finite over the affine coordinate subspaces of the corresponding dimensions.[2]

The Noether normalization lemma can be used as an important step in proving Hilbert's Nullstellensatz, one of the most fundamental results of classical algebraic geometry. The normalization theorem is also an important tool in establishing the notions of Krull dimension for k-algebras.

Proof

Theorem. (Noether Normalization Lemma) Let k be a field and A=k[y1,...,ym] be a finitely generated k-algebra. Then for some integer d, 0≀d≀m, there exist y1,…,yd∈A algebraically independent over k such that A is finite (i.e., finitely generated as a module) over k[y1,…,yd] (the integer d is then equal to the Krull dimension of A). If A is an integral domain, then d is also the transcendence degree of the field of fractions of A over k.

The following proof is due to Nagata and appears in Mumford's red book. A more geometric proof is given on page 176 of the red book.

Proof: We shall induct on m. Case m=0 is k=A and there is nothing to prove. Assume m=1. Then Aβ‰…k[y]/I as k-algebras, where IβŠ‚k[y] is some ideal. Since k[y] is a PID (it is a Euclidean domain), I=(f). If f=0 we are done, so assume fβ‰ 0. Let e be the degree of f. Then A is generated, as a k-vector space, by 1,y,y2,,yeβˆ’1. Thus A is finite over k. Assume now mβ‰₯2. If the yi are algebraically independent, then by setting yi=yi, we are done. If not, it is enough to prove the claim that there is a k-subalgebra S of A that is generated by mβˆ’1 elements, such that A is finite over S. Indeed, by the inductive hypothesis, we can find, for some integer d, 0≀d≀mβˆ’1, algebraically independent elements y1,...,yd of S such that S is finite over k[y1,...,yd]. Since A is finite over S, and S is finite over k[y1,...,yd], we obtain the desired conclusion that A is finite over k[y1,...,yd].

To prove the claim, we assume by hypothesis that the yi are not algebraically independent, so that there is a nonzero polynomial f in m variables over k such that

f(y1,…,ym)=0.

Given an integer r which is determined later, set

zi=yiβˆ’(y1)riβˆ’1,2≀i≀m,

and, for simplification of notation, write y~=y1.

Then the preceding reads:

f(y~,z2+y~r,z3+y~r2,…,zm+y~rmβˆ’1)=0.   (βˆ—)

Now, if ay~Ξ±1∏2m(zi+y~riβˆ’1)Ξ±i is a monomial appearing in the left-hand side of the above equation, with coefficient a∈k, the highest term in y~ after expanding the product looks like

ay~Ξ±1+Ξ±2r+β‹―+Ξ±mrmβˆ’1.

Whenever the above exponent agrees with the highest y~ exponent produced by some other monomial, it is possible that the highest term in y~ of f(y~,z2+y~r,z3+y~r2,...,zm+y~rmβˆ’1) will not be of the above form, because it may be affected by cancellation. However, if r is large enough (e.g., we can set r=1+degf), then each Ξ±1+Ξ±2r+β‹―+Ξ±mrmβˆ’1 encodes a unique base r number, so this does not occur. For such an r, let c∈k be the coefficient of the unique monomial of f of multidegree (Ξ±1,,Ξ±m) for which the quantity Ξ±1+Ξ±2r+β‹―+Ξ±mrmβˆ’1 is maximal. Multiplication of (βˆ—) by 1/c gives an integral dependence equation of y~ over S=k[z2,...,zm], i.e., y1(=y~) is integral over S. Moreover, because A=S[y1], A is in fact finite over S. This completes the proof of the claim, so we are done with the first part.

Moreover, if A is an integral domain, then d is the transcendence degree of its field of fractions. Indeed, A and the polynomial ring S=k[y1,...,yd] have the same transcendence degree (i.e., the degree of the field of fractions) since the field of fractions of A is algebraic over that of S (as A is integral over S) and S has transcendence degree d. Thus, it remains to show the Krull dimension of S is d. (This is also a consequence of dimension theory.) We induct on d, with the case d=0 being trivial. Since 0⊊(y1)⊊(y1,y2)βŠŠβ‹―βŠŠ(y1,,yd) is a chain of prime ideals, the dimension is at least d. To get the reverse estimate, let 0βŠŠπ”­1βŠŠβ‹―βŠŠπ”­m be a chain of prime ideals. Let 0β‰ uβˆˆπ”­1. We apply the Noether normalization and get T=k[u,z2,,zd] (in the normalization process, we're free to choose the first variable) such that S is integral over T. By the inductive hypothesis, T/(u) has dimension dβˆ’1. By incomparability, 𝔭i∩T is a chain of length m and then, in T/(𝔭1∩T), it becomes a chain of length mβˆ’1. Since dimT/(𝔭1∩T)≀dimT/(u), we have mβˆ’1≀dβˆ’1. Hence, dimS≀d. β—»

Refinement

The following refinement appears in Eisenbud's book, which builds on Nagata's idea:[2] Template:Math theorem

Geometrically speaking, the last part of the theorem says that for X=SpecAβŠ‚π€m any general linear projection 𝐀m→𝐀d induces a finite morphism X→𝐀d (cf. the lede); besides Eisenbud, see also [1].

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Illustrative application: generic freeness

A typical nontrivial application of the normalization lemma is the generic freeness theorem: Let A,B be rings such that A is a Noetherian integral domain and suppose there is a ring homomorphism Aβ†’B that exhibits B as a finitely generated algebra over A. Then there is some 0β‰ g∈A such that B[gβˆ’1] is a free A[gβˆ’1]-module.

To prove this, let F be the fraction field of A. We argue by induction on the Krull dimension of FβŠ—AB. The base case is when the Krull dimension is βˆ’βˆž; i.e., FβŠ—AB=0; that is, when there is some 0β‰ g∈A such that gB=0 , so that B[gβˆ’1] is free as an A[gβˆ’1]-module. For the inductive step, note that FβŠ—AB is a finitely generated F-algebra. Hence by the Noether normalization lemma, FβŠ—AB contains algebraically independent elements x1,,xd such that FβŠ—AB is finite over the polynomial ring F[x1,,xd]. Multiplying each xi by elements of A, we can assume xi are in B. We now consider:

A:=A[x1,,xd]β†’B.

Now B may not be finite over A, but it will become finite after inverting a single element as follows. If b is an element of B, then, as an element of FβŠ—AB, it is integral over F[x1,,xd]; i.e., bn+a1bnβˆ’1++an=0 for some ai in F[x1,,xd]. Thus, some 0β‰ g∈A kills all the denominators of the coefficients of ai and so b is integral over A[gβˆ’1]. Choosing some finitely many generators of B as an A-algebra and applying this observation to each generator, we find some 0β‰ g∈A such that B[gβˆ’1] is integral (thus finite) over A[gβˆ’1]. Replace B,A by B[gβˆ’1],A[gβˆ’1] and then we can assume B is finite over A:=A[x1,,xd]. To finish, consider a finite filtration B=B0βŠƒB1βŠƒB2βŠƒβ‹―βŠƒBr by A-submodules such that Bi/Bi+1≃A/𝔭i for prime ideals 𝔭i (such a filtration exists by the theory of associated primes). For each i, if 𝔭iβ‰ 0, by inductive hypothesis, we can choose some giβ‰ 0 in A such that A/𝔭i[giβˆ’1] is free as an A[giβˆ’1]-module, while A is a polynomial ring and thus free. Hence, with g=g0β‹―gr, B[gβˆ’1] is a free module over A[gβˆ’1]. β—»

Notes

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References

Further reading