Residue Field
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Residue Field
In mathematics, the residue field is a basic construction in commutative algebra. If ''R'' is a commutative ring and ''m'' is a maximal ideal, then the residue field is the quotient ring ''k'' = ''R''/''m'', which is a field. Frequently, ''R'' is a local ring and ''m'' is then its unique maximal ideal. This construction is applied in algebraic geometry, where to every point ''x'' of a scheme ''X'' one associates its residue field ''k''(''x''). One can say a little loosely that the residue field of a point of an abstract algebraic variety is the 'natural domain' for the coordinates of the point. Definition Suppose that ''R'' is a commutative local ring, with maximal ideal ''m''. Then the residue field is the quotient ring ''R''/''m''. Now suppose that ''X'' is a scheme and ''x'' is a point of ''X''. By the definition of scheme, we may find an affine neighbourhood ''U'' = Spec(''A''), with ''A'' some commutative ring. Considered in the neighbourhood ''U'', the point ''x'' correspond ...
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Mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics with the major subdisciplines of number theory, algebra, geometry, and analysis, respectively. There is no general consensus among mathematicians about a common definition for their academic discipline. Most mathematical activity involves the discovery of properties of abstract objects and the use of pure reason to prove them. These objects consist of either abstractions from nature orin modern mathematicsentities that are stipulated to have certain properties, called axioms. A ''proof'' consists of a succession of applications of deductive rules to already established results. These results include previously proved theorems, axioms, andin case of abstraction from naturesome basic properties that are considered true starting points of ...
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Rational Point
In number theory and algebraic geometry, a rational point of an algebraic variety is a point whose coordinates belong to a given field. If the field is not mentioned, the field of rational numbers is generally understood. If the field is the field of real numbers, a rational point is more commonly called a real point. Understanding rational points is a central goal of number theory and Diophantine geometry. For example, Fermat's Last Theorem may be restated as: for , the Fermat curve of equation x^n+y^n=1 has no other rational points than , , and, if is even, and . Definition Given a field ''k'', and an algebraically closed extension ''K'' of ''k'', an affine variety ''X'' over ''k'' is the set of common zeros in K^n of a collection of polynomials with coefficients in ''k'': :f_1(x_1,\ldots,x_n)=0,\ldots, f_r(x_1,\dots,x_n)=0. These common zeros are called the ''points'' of ''X''. A ''k''-rational point (or ''k''-point) of ''X'' is a point of ''X'' that belongs to ''k''''n'', ...
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Algebraic Geometry (book)
''Algebraic Geometry'' is an algebraic geometry textbook written by Robin Hartshorne and published by Springer-Verlag in 1977.MathSciNet lists more than 2500 citations of this book. Importance It was the first extended treatment of scheme theory written as a text intended to be accessible to graduate students. Contents The first chapter, titled "Varieties", deals with the classical algebraic geometry of varieties over algebraically closed fields. This chapter uses many classical results in commutative algebra, including 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 ..., with the books by Atiyah–Macdonald, Matsumura, and Zariski–Samuel as usual references. The second and the third chapters, "Schemes" and "Cohomology", form the technical heart of ...
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Krull Dimension
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 was 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'' 'x''1, ..., ''x''''n''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. There are several other ways that have been used to define the dimension of a ring. Most of them coinci ...
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Field Extension
In mathematics, particularly in algebra, a field extension is a pair of fields E\subseteq F, such that the operations of ''E'' are those of ''F'' restricted to ''E''. In this case, ''F'' is an extension field of ''E'' and ''E'' is a subfield of ''F''. For example, under the usual notions of addition and multiplication, the complex numbers are an extension field of the real numbers; the real numbers are a subfield of the complex numbers. Field extensions are fundamental in algebraic number theory, and in the study of polynomial roots through Galois theory, and are widely used in algebraic geometry. Subfield A subfield K of a field L is a subset K\subseteq L that is a field with respect to the field operations inherited from L. Equivalently, a subfield is a subset that contains 1, and is closed under the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and taking the inverse of a nonzero element of K. As , the latter definition implies K and L have the same zero eleme ...
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Transcendence Degree
In abstract algebra, the transcendence degree of a field extension ''L'' / ''K'' is a certain rather coarse measure of the "size" of the extension. Specifically, it is defined as the largest cardinality of an algebraically independent subset of ''L'' over ''K''. A subset ''S'' of ''L'' is a transcendence basis of ''L'' / ''K'' if it is algebraically independent over ''K'' and if furthermore ''L'' is an algebraic extension of the field ''K''(''S'') (the field obtained by adjoining the elements of ''S'' to ''K''). One can show that every field extension has a transcendence basis, and that all transcendence bases have the same cardinality; this cardinality is equal to the transcendence degree of the extension and is denoted trdeg''K'' ''L'' or trdeg(''L'' / ''K''). If no field ''K'' is specified, the transcendence degree of a field ''L'' is its degree relative to the prime field of the same characteristic, i.e., the rational numbers field Q if ''L'' is of characteristic 0 and ...
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Generic Point
In algebraic geometry, a generic point ''P'' of an algebraic variety ''X'' is, roughly speaking, a point at which all generic properties are true, a generic property being a property which is true for almost every point. In classical algebraic geometry, a generic point of an affine or projective algebraic variety of dimension ''d'' is a point such that the field generated by its coordinates has transcendence degree ''d'' over the field generated by the coefficients of the equations of the variety. In scheme theory, the spectrum of an integral domain has a unique generic point, which is the zero ideal. As the closure of this point for the Zariski topology is the whole spectrum, the definition has been extended to general topology, where a generic point of a topological space ''X'' is a point whose closure is ''X''. Definition and motivation A generic point of the topological space ''X'' is a point ''P'' whose closure is all of ''X'', that is, a point that is dense in ''X''. T ...
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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 geometry. It relates algebraic sets to ideals in polynomial rings over algebraically closed fields. This relationship was discovered by David Hilbert, who proved the Nullstellensatz in his second major paper on invariant theory in 1893 (following his seminal 1890 paper in which he proved Hilbert's basis theorem). Formulation Let ''k'' be a field (such as the rational numbers) and ''K'' be an algebraically closed field extension (such as the complex numbers). Consider the polynomial ring k _1, \ldots, X_n/math> and let ''I'' be an ideal in this ring. The algebraic set V(''I'') defined by this ideal consists of all ''n''-tuples x = (''x''1,...,''x''''n'') in ''Kn'' such that ''f''(x) = 0 for all ''f'' in ''I''. Hilbert's Nullstellensatz st ...
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Morphism Of Finite Type
For a homomorphism ''A'' → ''B'' of commutative rings, ''B'' is called an ''A''-algebra of finite type if ''B'' is a finitely generated as an ''A''-algebra. It is much stronger for ''B'' to be a finite ''A''-algebra, which means that ''B'' is finitely generated as an ''A''-module. For example, for any commutative ring ''A'' and natural number ''n'', the polynomial ring ''A'' 'x''1, ..., ''xn''is an ''A''-algebra of finite type, but it is not a finite ''A''-module unless ''A'' = 0 or ''n'' = 0. Another example of a finite-type morphism which is not finite is \mathbb \to \mathbb x,y]/(y^2 - x^3 - t). The analogous notion in terms of schemes is: a morphism ''f'': ''X'' → ''Y'' of schemes is of finite type if ''Y'' has a covering by affine open subschemes ''Vi'' = Spec ''Ai'' such that ''f''−1(''Vi'') has a finite covering by affine open subschemes ''Uij'' = Spec ''Bij'' with ''Bij'' an ''Ai''-algebra of finite type. One also says that ''X'' is of finite type over ''Y''. For exa ...
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Algebraically Closed Field
In mathematics, a field is algebraically closed if every non-constant polynomial in (the univariate polynomial ring with coefficients in ) has a root in . Examples As an example, the field of real numbers is not algebraically closed, because the polynomial equation ''x''2 + 1 = 0  has no solution in real numbers, even though all its coefficients (1 and 0) are real. The same argument proves that no subfield of the real field is algebraically closed; in particular, the field of rational numbers is not algebraically closed. Also, no finite field ''F'' is algebraically closed, because if ''a''1, ''a''2, ..., ''an'' are the elements of ''F'', then the polynomial (''x'' − ''a''1)(''x'' − ''a''2) ⋯ (''x'' − ''a''''n'') + 1 has no zero in ''F''. By contrast, the fundamental theorem of algebra states that the field of complex numbers is algebraically closed. Another example of an algebraicall ...
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Affine Line
In mathematics, an affine space is a geometric structure that generalizes some of the properties of Euclidean spaces in such a way that these are independent of the concepts of distance and measure of angles, keeping only the properties related to parallelism and ratio of lengths for parallel line segments. In an affine space, there is no distinguished point that serves as an origin. Hence, no vector has a fixed origin and no vector can be uniquely associated to a point. In an affine space, there are instead ''displacement vectors'', also called ''translation'' vectors or simply ''translations'', between two points of the space. Thus it makes sense to subtract two points of the space, giving a translation vector, but it does not make sense to add two points of the space. Likewise, it makes sense to add a displacement vector to a point of an affine space, resulting in a new point translated from the starting point by that vector. Any vector space may be viewed as an affine spac ...
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Ulrich Görtz
Ulrich Görtz (1973) is a German mathematician specialising in arithmetic geometry. Education and career From 1993 to 1997, Görtz studied mathematics at the University of Münster. He completed his PhD at the University of Cologne in 2000; his advisor was Michael Rapoport. In 2006, Görtz habilitated at the University of Bonn. From 2008 to 2009 he was the recipient of a Heisenberg-Stipendium of the German Research Foundation (DFG). He received the Von-Kaven-Ehrenpreis of the DFG. Since 2009, Görtz has been a professor at the University of Duisburg-Essen. Books Together with , Görtz authored the textbook ''Algebraic Geometry (Part I: Schemes)'' in 2010. Since August 2015, Görtz has been a member of the editorial board of the journal ''Results in Mathematics''. * Personal life Görtz is an Esperantist An Esperantist ( eo, esperantisto) is a person who speaks, reads or writes Esperanto. According to the Declaration of Boulogne, a document agreed upon at the first World ...
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