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Cohen–Macaulay ring

In mathematics, a Cohen–Macaulay ring is a commutative ring with some of the algebro-geometric properties of a smooth variety, such as local equidimensionality. Under mild assumptions, a local ring is Cohen–Macaulay exactly when it is a finitely generated free module over a regular local subring. Cohen–Macaulay rings play a central role in commutative algebra: they form a very broad class, and yet they are well understood in many ways.

They are named for Francis Sowerby Macaulay (1916), who proved the unmixedness theorem for polynomial rings, and for Irvin Cohen (1946), who proved the unmixedness theorem for formal power series rings. All Cohen–Macaulay rings have the unmixedness property.

For Noetherian local rings, there is the following chain of inclusions.

Universally catenary ringsCohen–Macaulay ringsGorenstein ringscomplete intersection ringsregular local rings

Definition

For a commutative Noetherian local ring R, a finite (i.e. finitely generated) R-module   is a Cohen-Macaulay module if   (in general we have:  , see Auslander–Buchsbaum formula for the relation between depth and dim of a certain kind of modules). On the other hand,   is a module on itself, so we call   a Cohen-Macaulay ring if it is a Cohen-Macaulay module as an  -module. A maximal Cohen-Macaulay module is a Cohen-Macaulay module M such that  .

The above definition was for a Noetherian local rings. But we can expand the definition for a more general Noetherian ring: If   is a commutative Noetherian ring, then an R-module M is called Cohen–Macaulay module if   is a Cohen-Macaulay module for all maximal ideals  . (This is a kind of circular definition unless we define zero modules as Cohen-Macaulay. So we define zero modules as Cohen-Macaulay modules in this definition) Now, to define maximal Cohen-Macaulay modules for these rings, we require that   to be such an  -module for each maximal ideal   of R. As in the local case, R is a Cohen-Macaulay ring if it is a Cohen-Macaulay module (as an  -module on itself).[1]

Examples

Noetherian rings of the following types are Cohen–Macaulay.

Some more examples:

  1. The ring K[x]/(x²) has dimension 0 and hence is Cohen–Macaulay, but it is not reduced and therefore not regular.
  2. The subring K[t2, t3] of the polynomial ring K[t], or its localization or completion at t=0, is a 1-dimensional domain which is Gorenstein, and hence Cohen–Macaulay, but not regular. This ring can also be described as the coordinate ring of the cuspidal cubic curve y2 = x3 over K.
  3. The subring K[t3, t4, t5] of the polynomial ring K[t], or its localization or completion at t=0, is a 1-dimensional domain which is Cohen–Macaulay but not Gorenstein.

Rational singularities over a field of characteristic zero are Cohen–Macaulay. Toric varieties over any field are Cohen–Macaulay.[3] The minimal model program makes prominent use of varieties with klt (Kawamata log terminal) singularities; in characteristic zero, these are rational singularities and hence are Cohen–Macaulay,[4] One successful analog of rational singularities in positive characteristic is the notion of F-rational singularities; again, such singularities are Cohen–Macaulay.[5]

Let X be a projective variety of dimension n ≥ 1 over a field, and let L be an ample line bundle on X. Then the section ring of L

 

is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if the cohomology group Hi(X, Lj) is zero for all 1 ≤ in−1 and all integers j.[6] It follows, for example, that the affine cone Spec R over an abelian variety X is Cohen–Macaulay when X has dimension 1, but not when X has dimension at least 2 (because H1(X, O) is not zero). See also Generalized Cohen–Macaulay ring.

Cohen–Macaulay schemes

We say that a locally Noetherian scheme   is Cohen–Macaulay if at each point   the local ring   is Cohen–Macaulay.

Cohen–Macaulay curves

Cohen–Macaulay curves are a special case of Cohen–Macaulay schemes, but are useful for compactifying moduli spaces of curves[7] where the boundary of the smooth locus   is of Cohen–Macaulay curves. There is a useful criterion for deciding whether or not curves are Cohen–Macaulay. Schemes of dimension   are Cohen–Macaulay if and only if they have no embedded primes.[8] The singularities present in Cohen–Macaulay curves can be classified completely by looking at the plane curve case.[9]

Non-examples

Using the criterion, there are easy examples of non-Cohen–Macaulay curves from constructing curves with embedded points. For example, the scheme

 

has the decomposition into prime ideals  . Geometrically it is the  -axis with an embedded point at the origin, which can be thought of as a fat point. Given a smooth projective plane curve  , a curve with an embedded point can be constructed using the same technique: find the ideal   of a point in   and multiply it with the ideal   of  . Then

 

is a curve with an embedded point at  .

Intersection theory

Cohen–Macaulay schemes have a special relation with intersection theory. Precisely, let X be a smooth variety[10] and V, W closed subschemes of pure dimension. Let Z be a proper component of the scheme-theoretic intersection  , that is, an irreducible component of expected dimension. If the local ring A of   at the generic point of Z is Cohen-Macaulay, then the intersection multiplicity of V and W along Z is given as the length of A:[11]

 .

In general, that multiplicity is given as a length essentially characterizes Cohen–Macaulay ring; see #Properties. Multiplicity one criterion, on the other hand, roughly characterizes a regular local ring as a local ring of multiplicity one.

Example

For a simple example, if we take the intersection of a parabola with a line tangent to it, the local ring at the intersection point is isomorphic to

 

which is Cohen–Macaulay of length two, hence the intersection multiplicity is two, as expected.

Miracle flatness or Hironaka's criterion

There is a remarkable characterization of Cohen–Macaulay rings, sometimes called miracle flatness or Hironaka's criterion. Let R be a local ring which is finitely generated as a module over some regular local ring A contained in R. Such a subring exists for any localization R at a prime ideal of a finitely generated algebra over a field, by the Noether normalization lemma; it also exists when R is complete and contains a field, or when R is a complete domain.[12] Then R is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if it is flat as an A-module; it is also equivalent to say that R is free as an A-module.[13]

A geometric reformulation is as follows. Let X be a connected affine scheme of finite type over a field K (for example, an affine variety). Let n be the dimension of X. By Noether normalization, there is a finite morphism f from X to affine space An over K. Then X is Cohen–Macaulay if and only all fibers of f have the same degree.[14] It is striking that this property is independent of the choice of f.

Finally, there is a version of Miracle Flatness for graded rings. Let R be a finitely generated commutative graded algebra over a field K,

 

There is always a graded polynomial subring AR (with generators in various degrees) such that R is finitely generated as an A-module. Then R is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if R is free as a graded A-module. Again, it follows that this freeness is independent of the choice of the polynomial subring A.

Properties

  • A Noetherian local ring is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if its completion is Cohen–Macaulay.[15]
  • If R is a Cohen–Macaulay ring, then the polynomial ring R[x] and the power series ring R[[x]] are Cohen–Macaulay.[16][17]
  • For a non-zero-divisor u in the maximal ideal of a Noetherian local ring R, R is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if R/(u) is Cohen–Macaulay.[18]
  • The quotient of a Cohen–Macaulay ring by any ideal is universally catenary.[19]
  • If R is a quotient of a Cohen–Macaulay ring, then the locus { p ∈ Spec R | Rp is Cohen–Macaulay } is an open subset of Spec R.[20]
  • Let (R, m, k) be a Noetherian local ring of embedding codimension c, meaning that c = dimk(m/m2) − dim(R). In geometric terms, this holds for a local ring of a subscheme of codimension c in a regular scheme. For c=1, R is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if it is a hypersurface ring. There is also a structure theorem for Cohen–Macaulay rings of codimension 2, the Hilbert–Burch theorem: they are all determinantal rings, defined by the r × r minors of an (r+1) × r matrix for some r.
  • For a Noetherian local ring (R, m), the following are equivalent:[21]
    1. R is Cohen–Macaulay.
    2. For every parameter ideal Q (an ideal generated by a system of parameters),
        := the Hilbert–Samuel multiplicity of Q.
    3. For some parameter ideal Q,  .
(See Generalized Cohen–Macaulay ring as well as Buchsbaum ring for rings that generalize this characterization.)

The unmixedness theorem

An ideal I of a Noetherian ring A is called unmixed in height if the height of I is equal to the height of every associated prime P of A/I. (This is stronger than saying that A/I is equidimensional; see below.)

The unmixedness theorem is said to hold for the ring A if every ideal I generated by a number of elements equal to its height is unmixed. A Noetherian ring is Cohen–Macaulay if and only if the unmixedness theorem holds for it.[22]

The unmixed theorem applies in particular to the zero ideal (an ideal generated by zero elements) and thus it says a Cohen–Macaulay ring is an equidimensional ring; in fact, in the strong sense: there is no embedded component and each component has the same codimension.

See also: quasi-unmixed ring (a ring in which the unmixed theorem holds for integral closure of an ideal).

Counterexamples

  1. If K is a field, then the ring R = K[x,y]/(x2,xy) (the coordinate ring of a line with an embedded point) is not Cohen–Macaulay. This follows, for example, by Miracle Flatness: R is finite over the polynomial ring A = K[y], with degree 1 over points of the affine line Spec A with y ≠ 0, but with degree 2 over the point y = 0 (because the K-vector space K[x]/(x2) has dimension 2).
  2. If K is a field, then the ring K[x,y,z]/(xy,xz) (the coordinate ring of the union of a line and a plane) is reduced, but not equidimensional, and hence not Cohen–Macaulay. Taking the quotient by the non-zero-divisor xz gives the previous example.
  3. If K is a field, then the ring R = K[w,x,y,z]/(wy,wz,xy,xz) (the coordinate ring of the union of two planes meeting in a point) is reduced and equidimensional, but not Cohen–Macaulay. To prove that, one can use Hartshorne's connectedness theorem: if R is a Cohen–Macaulay local ring of dimension at least 2, then Spec R minus its closed point is connected.[23]

The Segre product of two Cohen-Macaulay rings need not be Cohen-Macaulay.[citation needed]

Grothendieck duality

One meaning of the Cohen–Macaulay condition can be seen in coherent duality theory. A variety or scheme X is Cohen–Macaulay if the "dualizing complex", which a priori lies in the derived category of sheaves on X, is represented by a single sheaf. The stronger property of being Gorenstein means that this sheaf is a line bundle. In particular, every regular scheme is Gorenstein. Thus the statements of duality theorems such as Serre duality or Grothendieck local duality for Gorenstein or Cohen–Macaulay schemes retain some of the simplicity of what happens for regular schemes or smooth varieties.

Notes

  1. ^ Bruns & Herzog, from def. 2.1.1
  2. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Theorem 18.18.
  3. ^ Fulton (1993), p. 89.
  4. ^ Kollár & Mori (1998), Theorems 5.20 and 5.22.
  5. ^ Schwede & Tucker (2012), Appendix C.1.
  6. ^ Kollár (2013), (3.4).
  7. ^ Honsen, Morten. "Compactifying Locally Cohen–Macaulay Projective Curves" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 5 Mar 2020.
  8. ^ "Lemma 31.4.4 (0BXG)—The Stacks project". stacks.math.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-05.
  9. ^ Wiegand, Roger (December 1991). "Curve singularities of finite Cohen–Macaulay type". Arkiv för Matematik. 29 (1–2): 339–357. Bibcode:1991ArM....29..339W. doi:10.1007/BF02384346. ISSN 0004-2080.
  10. ^ smoothness here is somehow extraneous and is used in part to make sense of a proper component.
  11. ^ Fulton 1998, Proposition 8.2. (b)
  12. ^ Bruns & Herzog, Theorem A.22.
  13. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Corollary 18.17.
  14. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Exercise 18.17.
  15. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.5.
  16. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.7.
  17. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 23.5.; NB: although the reference is somehow vague on whether a ring there is assumed to be local or not, the proof there does not need the ring to be local.
  18. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.3.(ii).
  19. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.9.
  20. ^ Matsumura (1989), Exercise 24.2.
  21. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.11.
  22. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 17.6.
  23. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Theorem 18.12.

References

External links

  • Examples of Cohen-Macaulay integral domains
  • Examples of Cohen-Macaulay rings

See also

cohen, macaulay, ring, confused, with, cohen, ring, cohen, algebra, mathematics, commutative, ring, with, some, algebro, geometric, properties, smooth, variety, such, local, equidimensionality, under, mild, assumptions, local, ring, cohen, macaulay, exactly, w. Not to be confused with Cohen ring or Cohen algebra In mathematics a Cohen Macaulay ring is a commutative ring with some of the algebro geometric properties of a smooth variety such as local equidimensionality Under mild assumptions a local ring is Cohen Macaulay exactly when it is a finitely generated free module over a regular local subring Cohen Macaulay rings play a central role in commutative algebra they form a very broad class and yet they are well understood in many ways They are named for Francis Sowerby Macaulay 1916 who proved the unmixedness theorem for polynomial rings and for Irvin Cohen 1946 who proved the unmixedness theorem for formal power series rings All Cohen Macaulay rings have the unmixedness property For Noetherian local rings there is the following chain of inclusions Universally catenary rings Cohen Macaulay rings Gorenstein rings complete intersection rings regular local ringsContents 1 Definition 2 Examples 3 Cohen Macaulay schemes 3 1 Cohen Macaulay curves 3 1 1 Non examples 3 2 Intersection theory 3 3 Example 4 Miracle flatness or Hironaka s criterion 5 Properties 6 The unmixedness theorem 7 Counterexamples 8 Grothendieck duality 9 Notes 10 References 11 External links 12 See alsoDefinition EditFor a commutative Noetherian local ring R a finite i e finitely generated R module M 0 displaystyle M neq 0 is a Cohen Macaulay module if d e p t h M d i m M displaystyle mathrm depth M mathrm dim M in general we have d e p t h M d i m M displaystyle mathrm depth M leq mathrm dim M see Auslander Buchsbaum formula for the relation between depth and dim of a certain kind of modules On the other hand R displaystyle R is a module on itself so we call R displaystyle R a Cohen Macaulay ring if it is a Cohen Macaulay module as an R displaystyle R module A maximal Cohen Macaulay module is a Cohen Macaulay module M such that d i m M d i m R displaystyle mathrm dim M mathrm dim R The above definition was for a Noetherian local rings But we can expand the definition for a more general Noetherian ring If R displaystyle R is a commutative Noetherian ring then an R module M is called Cohen Macaulay module if M m displaystyle M mathrm m is a Cohen Macaulay module for all maximal ideals m S u p p M displaystyle mathrm m in mathrm Supp M This is a kind of circular definition unless we define zero modules as Cohen Macaulay So we define zero modules as Cohen Macaulay modules in this definition Now to define maximal Cohen Macaulay modules for these rings we require that M m displaystyle M mathrm m to be such an R m displaystyle R mathrm m module for each maximal ideal m displaystyle mathrm m of R As in the local case R is a Cohen Macaulay ring if it is a Cohen Macaulay module as an R displaystyle R module on itself 1 Examples EditNoetherian rings of the following types are Cohen Macaulay Any regular local ring This leads to various examples of Cohen Macaulay rings such as the integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z or a polynomial ring K x 1 x n displaystyle K x 1 ldots x n over a field K or a power series ring K x 1 x n displaystyle K x 1 ldots x n In geometric terms every regular scheme for example a smooth variety over a field is Cohen Macaulay Any 0 dimensional ring or equivalently any Artinian ring Any 1 dimensional reduced ring for example any 1 dimensional domain Any 2 dimensional normal ring Any Gorenstein ring In particular any complete intersection ring The ring of invariants R G displaystyle R G when R is a Cohen Macaulay algebra over a field of characteristic zero and G is a finite group or more generally a linear algebraic group whose identity component is reductive This is the Hochster Roberts theorem Any determinantal ring That is let R be the quotient of a regular local ring S by the ideal I generated by the r r minors of some p q matrix of elements of S If the codimension or height of I is equal to the expected codimension p r 1 q r 1 R is called a determinantal ring In that case R is Cohen Macaulay 2 Similarly coordinate rings of determinantal varieties are Cohen Macaulay Some more examples The ring K x x has dimension 0 and hence is Cohen Macaulay but it is not reduced and therefore not regular The subring K t2 t3 of the polynomial ring K t or its localization or completion at t 0 is a 1 dimensional domain which is Gorenstein and hence Cohen Macaulay but not regular This ring can also be described as the coordinate ring of the cuspidal cubic curve y2 x3 over K The subring K t3 t4 t5 of the polynomial ring K t or its localization or completion at t 0 is a 1 dimensional domain which is Cohen Macaulay but not Gorenstein Rational singularities over a field of characteristic zero are Cohen Macaulay Toric varieties over any field are Cohen Macaulay 3 The minimal model program makes prominent use of varieties with klt Kawamata log terminal singularities in characteristic zero these are rational singularities and hence are Cohen Macaulay 4 One successful analog of rational singularities in positive characteristic is the notion of F rational singularities again such singularities are Cohen Macaulay 5 Let X be a projective variety of dimension n 1 over a field and let L be an ample line bundle on X Then the section ring of L R j 0 H 0 X L j displaystyle R bigoplus j geq 0 H 0 X L j is Cohen Macaulay if and only if the cohomology group Hi X Lj is zero for all 1 i n 1 and all integers j 6 It follows for example that the affine cone Spec R over an abelian variety X is Cohen Macaulay when X has dimension 1 but not when X has dimension at least 2 because H1 X O is not zero See also Generalized Cohen Macaulay ring Cohen Macaulay schemes EditWe say that a locally Noetherian scheme X displaystyle X is Cohen Macaulay if at each point x X displaystyle x in X the local ring O X x displaystyle mathcal O X x is Cohen Macaulay Cohen Macaulay curves Edit Cohen Macaulay curves are a special case of Cohen Macaulay schemes but are useful for compactifying moduli spaces of curves 7 where the boundary of the smooth locus M g displaystyle mathcal M g is of Cohen Macaulay curves There is a useful criterion for deciding whether or not curves are Cohen Macaulay Schemes of dimension 1 displaystyle leq 1 are Cohen Macaulay if and only if they have no embedded primes 8 The singularities present in Cohen Macaulay curves can be classified completely by looking at the plane curve case 9 Non examples Edit Using the criterion there are easy examples of non Cohen Macaulay curves from constructing curves with embedded points For example the scheme X Spec C x y x 2 x y displaystyle X text Spec left frac mathbb C x y x 2 xy right has the decomposition into prime ideals x x y displaystyle x cdot x y Geometrically it is the y displaystyle y axis with an embedded point at the origin which can be thought of as a fat point Given a smooth projective plane curve C P 2 displaystyle C subset mathbb P 2 a curve with an embedded point can be constructed using the same technique find the ideal I x displaystyle I x of a point in x C displaystyle x in C and multiply it with the ideal I C displaystyle I C of C displaystyle C Then X Proj C x y z I C I x displaystyle X text Proj left frac mathbb C x y z I C cdot I x right is a curve with an embedded point at x displaystyle x Intersection theory Edit Cohen Macaulay schemes have a special relation with intersection theory Precisely let X be a smooth variety 10 and V W closed subschemes of pure dimension Let Z be a proper component of the scheme theoretic intersection V X W displaystyle V times X W that is an irreducible component of expected dimension If the local ring A of V X W displaystyle V times X W at the generic point of Z is Cohen Macaulay then the intersection multiplicity of V and W along Z is given as the length of A 11 i Z V W X length A displaystyle i Z V cdot W X operatorname length A In general that multiplicity is given as a length essentially characterizes Cohen Macaulay ring see Properties Multiplicity one criterion on the other hand roughly characterizes a regular local ring as a local ring of multiplicity one Example Edit For a simple example if we take the intersection of a parabola with a line tangent to it the local ring at the intersection point is isomorphic to C x y y x 2 C x y C x y y C x x 2 displaystyle frac mathbb C x y y x 2 otimes mathbb C x y frac mathbb C x y y cong frac mathbb C x x 2 which is Cohen Macaulay of length two hence the intersection multiplicity is two as expected Miracle flatness or Hironaka s criterion EditThere is a remarkable characterization of Cohen Macaulay rings sometimes called miracle flatness or Hironaka s criterion Let R be a local ring which is finitely generated as a module over some regular local ring A contained in R Such a subring exists for any localization R at a prime ideal of a finitely generated algebra over a field by the Noether normalization lemma it also exists when R is complete and contains a field or when R is a complete domain 12 Then R is Cohen Macaulay if and only if it is flat as an A module it is also equivalent to say that R is free as an A module 13 A geometric reformulation is as follows Let X be a connected affine scheme of finite type over a field K for example an affine variety Let n be the dimension of X By Noether normalization there is a finite morphism f from X to affine space An over K Then X is Cohen Macaulay if and only all fibers of f have the same degree 14 It is striking that this property is independent of the choice of f Finally there is a version of Miracle Flatness for graded rings Let R be a finitely generated commutative graded algebra over a field K R K R 1 R 2 displaystyle R K oplus R 1 oplus R 2 oplus cdots There is always a graded polynomial subring A R with generators in various degrees such that R is finitely generated as an A module Then R is Cohen Macaulay if and only if R is free as a graded A module Again it follows that this freeness is independent of the choice of the polynomial subring A Properties EditA Noetherian local ring is Cohen Macaulay if and only if its completion is Cohen Macaulay 15 If R is a Cohen Macaulay ring then the polynomial ring R x and the power series ring R x are Cohen Macaulay 16 17 For a non zero divisor u in the maximal ideal of a Noetherian local ring R R is Cohen Macaulay if and only if R u is Cohen Macaulay 18 The quotient of a Cohen Macaulay ring by any ideal is universally catenary 19 If R is a quotient of a Cohen Macaulay ring then the locus p Spec R Rp is Cohen Macaulay is an open subset of Spec R 20 Let R m k be a Noetherian local ring of embedding codimension c meaning that c dimk m m2 dim R In geometric terms this holds for a local ring of a subscheme of codimension c in a regular scheme For c 1 R is Cohen Macaulay if and only if it is a hypersurface ring There is also a structure theorem for Cohen Macaulay rings of codimension 2 the Hilbert Burch theorem they are all determinantal rings defined by the r r minors of an r 1 r matrix for some r For a Noetherian local ring R m the following are equivalent 21 R is Cohen Macaulay For every parameter ideal Q an ideal generated by a system of parameters length R Q e Q displaystyle operatorname length R Q e Q the Hilbert Samuel multiplicity of Q For some parameter ideal Q length R Q e Q displaystyle operatorname length R Q e Q See Generalized Cohen Macaulay ring as well as Buchsbaum ring for rings that generalize this characterization The unmixedness theorem EditAn ideal I of a Noetherian ring A is called unmixed in height if the height of I is equal to the height of every associated prime P of A I This is stronger than saying that A I is equidimensional see below The unmixedness theorem is said to hold for the ring A if every ideal I generated by a number of elements equal to its height is unmixed A Noetherian ring is Cohen Macaulay if and only if the unmixedness theorem holds for it 22 The unmixed theorem applies in particular to the zero ideal an ideal generated by zero elements and thus it says a Cohen Macaulay ring is an equidimensional ring in fact in the strong sense there is no embedded component and each component has the same codimension See also quasi unmixed ring a ring in which the unmixed theorem holds for integral closure of an ideal Counterexamples EditIf K is a field then the ring R K x y x2 xy the coordinate ring of a line with an embedded point is not Cohen Macaulay This follows for example by Miracle Flatness R is finite over the polynomial ring A K y with degree 1 over points of the affine line Spec A with y 0 but with degree 2 over the point y 0 because the K vector space K x x2 has dimension 2 If K is a field then the ring K x y z xy xz the coordinate ring of the union of a line and a plane is reduced but not equidimensional and hence not Cohen Macaulay Taking the quotient by the non zero divisor x z gives the previous example If K is a field then the ring R K w x y z wy wz xy xz the coordinate ring of the union of two planes meeting in a point is reduced and equidimensional but not Cohen Macaulay To prove that one can use Hartshorne s connectedness theorem if R is a Cohen Macaulay local ring of dimension at least 2 then Spec R minus its closed point is connected 23 The Segre product of two Cohen Macaulay rings need not be Cohen Macaulay citation needed Grothendieck duality EditOne meaning of the Cohen Macaulay condition can be seen in coherent duality theory A variety or scheme X is Cohen Macaulay if the dualizing complex which a priori lies in the derived category of sheaves on X is represented by a single sheaf The stronger property of being Gorenstein means that this sheaf is a line bundle In particular every regular scheme is Gorenstein Thus the statements of duality theorems such as Serre duality or Grothendieck local duality for Gorenstein or Cohen Macaulay schemes retain some of the simplicity of what happens for regular schemes or smooth varieties Notes Edit Bruns amp Herzog from def 2 1 1 Eisenbud 1995 Theorem 18 18 Fulton 1993 p 89 Kollar amp Mori 1998 Theorems 5 20 and 5 22 Schwede amp Tucker 2012 Appendix C 1 Kollar 2013 3 4 Honsen Morten Compactifying Locally Cohen Macaulay Projective Curves PDF Archived PDF from the original on 5 Mar 2020 Lemma 31 4 4 0BXG The Stacks project stacks math columbia edu Retrieved 2020 03 05 Wiegand Roger December 1991 Curve singularities of finite Cohen Macaulay type Arkiv for Matematik 29 1 2 339 357 Bibcode 1991ArM 29 339W doi 10 1007 BF02384346 ISSN 0004 2080 smoothness here is somehow extraneous and is used in part to make sense of a proper component Fulton 1998 Proposition 8 2 b Bruns amp Herzog Theorem A 22 Eisenbud 1995 Corollary 18 17 Eisenbud 1995 Exercise 18 17 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 5 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 7 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 23 5 NB although the reference is somehow vague on whether a ring there is assumed to be local or not the proof there does not need the ring to be local Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 3 ii Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 9 Matsumura 1989 Exercise 24 2 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 11 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 17 6 Eisenbud 1995 Theorem 18 12 References EditBruns Winfried Herzog Jurgen 1993 Cohen Macaulay Rings Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics vol 39 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 41068 7 MR 1251956 Cohen I S 1946 On the structure and ideal theory of complete local rings Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 59 1 54 106 doi 10 2307 1990313 ISSN 0002 9947 JSTOR 1990313 MR 0016094 Cohen s paper was written when local ring meant what is now called a Noetherian local ring V I Danilov 2001 1994 Cohen Macaulay ring Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Eisenbud David 1995 Commutative Algebra with a View toward Algebraic Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 150 Berlin New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 5350 1 ISBN 978 0 387 94268 1 MR 1322960 Fulton William 1993 Introduction to Toric Varieties Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9781400882526 ISBN 978 0 691 00049 7 MR 1234037 Fulton William 1998 Intersection theory Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete 3 Folge vol 2 2nd ed Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 62046 4 MR 1644323 Kollar Janos Mori Shigefumi 1998 Birational Geometry of Algebraic Varieties Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511662560 ISBN 0 521 63277 3 MR 1658959 Kollar Janos 2013 Singularities of the Minimal Model Program Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139547895 ISBN 978 1 107 03534 8 MR 3057950 Macaulay F S 1994 1916 The Algebraic Theory of Modular Systems Cambridge University Press ISBN 1 4297 0441 1 MR 1281612 Matsumura Hideyuki 1989 Commutative Ring Theory Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36764 6 MR 0879273 Schwede Karl Tucker Kevin 2012 A survey of test ideals Progress in Commutative Algebra 2 Berlin Walter de Gruyter pp 39 99 arXiv 1104 2000 Bibcode 2011arXiv1104 2000S MR 2932591External links EditExamples of Cohen Macaulay integral domains Examples of Cohen Macaulay ringsSee also EditRing theory Local rings Gorenstein local rings Wiles s proof of Fermat s Last Theorem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cohen Macaulay ring amp oldid 1099047862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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