Krull dimension

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In commutative algebra, the Krull dimension of a commutative ring R, named after Wolfgang Krull, is the supremum of the lengths of all chains of prime ideals. The Krull dimension need not be finite even for a Noetherian ring. More generally the Krull dimension can be defined for modules over possibly non-commutative rings as the deviation of the poset of submodules.

The Krull dimension has been introduced to provide an algebraic definition of the dimension of an algebraic variety: the dimension of the affine variety defined by an ideal I in a polynomial ring R is the Krull dimension of R/I.

A field k has Krull dimension 0; more generally, k[x1, ..., xn] has Krull dimension n. A principal ideal domain that is not a field has Krull dimension 1. A local ring has Krull dimension 0 if and only if every element of its maximal ideal is nilpotent.

Explanation

We say that a chain of prime ideals of the form \mathfrak{p}_0\subsetneq \mathfrak{p}_1\subsetneq \ldots \subsetneq \mathfrak{p}_n has length n. That is, the length is the number of strict inclusions, not the number of primes; these differ by 1. We define the Krull dimension of R to be the supremum of the lengths of all chains of prime ideals in R.

Given a prime \mathfrak{p} in R, we define the height of \mathfrak{p}, written \operatorname{ht}(\mathfrak{p}), to be the supremum of the lengths of all chains of prime ideals contained in \mathfrak{p}, meaning that \mathfrak{p}_0\subsetneq \mathfrak{p}_1\subsetneq \ldots \subsetneq \mathfrak{p}_n = \mathfrak{p}.[1] In other words, the height of \mathfrak{p} is the Krull dimension of the localization of R at \mathfrak{p}. A prime ideal has height zero if and only if it is a minimal prime ideal. The Krull dimension of a ring is the supremum of the heights of all maximal ideals, or those of all prime ideals.

In a Noetherian ring, every prime ideal has finite height. Nonetheless, Nagata gave an example of a Noetherian ring of infinite Krull dimension.[2] A ring is called catenary if any inclusion \mathfrak{p}\subset \mathfrak{q} of prime ideals can be extended to a maximal chain of prime ideals between \mathfrak{p} and \mathfrak{q}, and any two maximal chains between \mathfrak{p} and \mathfrak{q} have the same length. A ring is called universally catenary if any finitely generated algebra over it is catenary. Nagata gave an example of a Noetherian ring which is not catenary.[3]

In a Noetherian ring, Krull's height theorem says that the height of an ideal generated by n elements is no greater than n.

More generally, the height of an ideal I is the infimum of the heights of all prime ideals containing I. In the language of algebraic geometry, this is the codimension of the subvariety of Spec(R) corresponding to I.[4]

Krull dimension and schemes

It follows readily from the definition of the spectrum of a ring Spec(R), the space of prime ideals of R equipped with the Zariski topology, that the Krull dimension of R is equal to the dimension of its spectrum as a topological space, meaning the supremum of the lengths of all chains of irreducible closed subsets. This follows immediately from the Galois connection between ideals of R and closed subsets of Spec(R) and the observation that, by the definition of Spec(R), each prime ideal \mathfrak{p} of R corresponds to a generic point of the closed subset associated to \mathfrak{p} by the Galois connection.

Examples

  • The dimension of a polynomial ring over a field k[x1, ..., xn] is the number of variables n. In the language of algebraic geometry, this says that the affine space of dimension n over a field has dimension n, as expected. In general, if R is a Noetherian ring of dimension n, then the dimension of R[x] is n + 1. If the Noetherian hypothesis is dropped, then R[x] can have dimension anywhere between n + 1 and 2n + 1.
  • The ring of integers Z has dimension 1. More generally, any principal ideal domain that is not a field has dimension 1.
  • The Krull dimension of the zero ring is typically defined to be either -\infty or -1. The zero ring is the only ring with a negative dimension.
  • Let R be an algebra over a field k that is an integral domain. Then the Krull dimension of R is less than or equal to the transcendence degree of the field of fractions of R over k.[5] The equality holds if R is finitely generated as algebra (for instance by the noether normalization lemma).
  • Let R be a Noetherian ring, I an ideal and \operatorname{gr}_I(R) = \oplus_0^\infty I^k/I^{k+1} be the associated graded ring (geometers call it the ring of the normal cone of I.) Then \operatorname{dim} \operatorname{gr}_I(R) is the supremum of the heights of maximal ideals of R containing I.[6]
  • A commutative Noetherian ring of Krull dimension zero is a direct product of a finite number (possibly one) of local rings of Krull dimension zero.

Krull dimension of a module

If R is a commutative ring, and M is an R-module, we define the Krull dimension of M to be the Krull dimension of the quotient of R making M a faithful module. That is, we define it by the formula:

\operatorname{dim}_R M := \operatorname{dim}( R/\operatorname{Ann}_R(M))

where AnnR(M), the annihilator, is the kernel of the natural map R → EndR(M) of R into the ring of R-linear endomorphisms of M.

In the language of schemes, finitely generated modules are interpreted as coherent sheaves, or generalized finite rank vector bundles.

Krull dimension for non-commutative rings

The Krull dimension of a module over a possibly non-commutative ring is defined as the deviation of the poset of submodules ordered by inclusion. For commutative Noetherian rings, this is the same as the definition using chains of prime ideals.[8] The two definitions can be different for commutative rings which are not Noetherian.

See also

Notes

  1. Matsumura, Hideyuki: "Commutative Ring Theory", page 30–31, 1989
  2. Eisenbud, D. Commutative Algebra (1995). Springer, Berlin. Exercise 9.6.
  3. Matsumura, H. Commutative Algebra (1970). Benjamin, New York. Example 14.E.
  4. Matsumura, Hideyuki: "Commutative Ring Theory", page 30–31, 1989
  5. http://mathoverflow.net/questions/79959/krull-dimension-transcendence-degree
  6. Eisenbud 2004, Exercise 13.8
  7. Hartshorne,Robin:"Algebraic Geometry", page 7,1977
  8. McConnell, J.C. and Robson, J.C. Noncommutative Noetherian Rings (2001). Amer. Math. Soc., Providence. Corollary 6.4.8.

Bibliography

  • Irving Kaplansky, Commutative rings (revised ed.), University of Chicago Press, 1974, ISBN 0-226-42454-5. Page 32.
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