Krull's Principal Ideal Theorem
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In
commutative algebra Commutative algebra, first known as ideal theory, is the branch of algebra that studies commutative rings, their ideal (ring theory), ideals, and module (mathematics), modules over such rings. Both algebraic geometry and algebraic number theo ...
, Krull's principal ideal theorem, named after
Wolfgang Krull Wolfgang Krull (26 August 1899 – 12 April 1971) was a German mathematician who made fundamental contributions to commutative algebra, introducing concepts that are now central to the subject. Krull was born and went to school in Baden-Baden. H ...
(1899–1971), gives a bound on the
height Height is measure of vertical distance, either vertical extent (how "tall" something or someone is) or vertical position (how "high" a point is). For an example of vertical extent, "This basketball player is 7 foot 1 inches in height." For an e ...
of a
principal ideal In mathematics, specifically ring theory, a principal ideal is an ideal I in a ring R that is generated by a single element a of R through multiplication by every element of R. The term also has another, similar meaning in order theory, where ...
in a commutative
Noetherian ring In mathematics, a Noetherian ring is a ring that satisfies the ascending chain condition on left and right ideals. If the chain condition is satisfied only for left ideals or for right ideals, then the ring is said left-Noetherian or right-Noethe ...
. The theorem is sometimes referred to by its German name, ''Krulls Hauptidealsatz'' (from ' ("Principal") + ' + ' ("theorem")). Precisely, if ''R'' is a Noetherian ring and ''I'' is a principal, proper ideal of ''R'', then each
minimal prime ideal In mathematics, especially in commutative algebra, certain prime ideals called minimal prime ideals play an important role in understanding rings and modules. The notion of height and Krull's principal ideal theorem use minimal prime ideals. De ...
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. 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 Commutative algebra, first known as ideal theory, is the branch of algebra that studies commutative rings, their ideal (ring theory), ideals, and module (mathematics), modules over such rings. Both algebraic geometry and algebraic number theo ...
'' 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 \mathfrak a minimal prime over ''x''. Replacing ''A'' by the localization A_\mathfrak, we can assume A is local with the maximal ideal \mathfrak. Let \mathfrak \subsetneq \mathfrak be a strictly smaller prime ideal and let \mathfrak^ = \mathfrak^n A_ \cap A, which is a \mathfrak-
primary ideal In mathematics, specifically commutative algebra, a proper ideal ''Q'' of a commutative ring ''A'' is said to be primary if whenever ''xy'' is an element of ''Q'' then ''x'' or ''y'n'' is also an element of ''Q'', for some ''n'' > 0. ...
called the ''n''-th symbolic power of \mathfrak. It forms a descending chain of ideals A \supset \mathfrak \supset \mathfrak^ \supset \mathfrak^ \supset \cdots. Thus, there is the descending chain of ideals \mathfrak^ + (x)/(x) in the ring \overline = A/(x). Now, the radical \sqrt is the intersection of all minimal prime ideals containing x; \mathfrak is among them. But \mathfrak is a unique maximal ideal and thus \sqrt = \mathfrak. Since (x) contains some power of its radical, it follows that \overline is an Artinian ring and thus the chain \mathfrak^ + (x)/(x) stabilizes and so there is some ''n'' such that \mathfrak^ + (x) = \mathfrak^ + (x). It implies: :\mathfrak^ = \mathfrak^ + x \, \mathfrak^, from the fact \mathfrak^ is \mathfrak-primary (if y is in \mathfrak^, then y = z + ax with z \in \mathfrak^ and a \in A. Since \mathfrak is minimal over x, x \not\in \mathfrak and so ax \in \mathfrak^ implies a is in \mathfrak^.) Now, quotienting out both sides by \mathfrak^ yields \mathfrak^/\mathfrak^ = (x)\mathfrak^/\mathfrak^. 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 = \mathfrak^/\mathfrak^ = 0; i.e., \mathfrak^ = \mathfrak^ and thus \mathfrak^ A_ = \mathfrak^ A_. Using Nakayama's lemma again, \mathfrak^ A_ = 0 and A_ is an Artinian ring; thus, the height of \mathfrak is zero. \square


Proof of the height theorem

Krull's height theorem can be proved as a consequence of the principal ideal theorem by induction on the number of elements. Let x_1, \dots, x_n be elements in A, \mathfrak a minimal prime over (x_1, \dots, x_n) and \mathfrak \subsetneq \mathfrak a prime ideal such that there is no prime strictly between them. Replacing A by the localization A_ we can assume (A, \mathfrak) is a local ring; note we then have \mathfrak = \sqrt. By minimality of \mathfrak, it follows that \mathfrak cannot contain all the x_i; relabeling the subscripts, say, x_1 \not\in \mathfrak. Since every prime ideal containing \mathfrak + (x_1) is between \mathfrak and \mathfrak, \sqrt = \mathfrak and thus we can write for each i \ge 2, :x_i^ = y_i + a_i x_1 with y_i \in \mathfrak and a_i \in A. Now we consider the ring \overline = A/(y_2, \dots, y_n) and the corresponding chain \overline \subset \overline in it. If \overline is a minimal prime over \overline, then \mathfrak contains x_1, x_2^, \dots, x_n^ and thus \mathfrak = \mathfrak; that is to say, \overline is a minimal prime over \overline and so, by Krull's principal ideal theorem, \overline is a minimal prime (over zero); \mathfrak is a minimal prime over (y_2, \dots, y_n). By inductive hypothesis, \operatorname(\mathfrak) \le n-1 and thus \operatorname(\mathfrak) \le n. \square


References

* * {{Citation , last1=Matsumura , first1=Hideyuki , title=Commutative Algebra , publisher=Benjamin , location=New York , year=1970, see in particular section (12.I), p. 77

Commutative algebra Ideals (ring theory) Theorems in ring theory