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Gorenstein ring

In commutative algebra, a Gorenstein local ring is a commutative Noetherian local ring R with finite injective dimension as an R-module. There are many equivalent conditions, some of them listed below, often saying that a Gorenstein ring is self-dual in some sense.

Gorenstein rings were introduced by Grothendieck in his 1961 seminar (published in (Hartshorne 1967)). The name comes from a duality property of singular plane curves studied by Gorenstein (1952) (who was fond of claiming that he did not understand the definition of a Gorenstein ring[citation needed]). The zero-dimensional case had been studied by Macaulay (1934). Serre (1961) and Bass (1963) publicized the concept of Gorenstein rings.

Frobenius rings are noncommutative analogs of zero-dimensional Gorenstein rings. Gorenstein schemes are the geometric version of Gorenstein rings.

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

Universally catenary ringsCohen–Macaulay ringsGorenstein ringscomplete intersection ringsregular local rings

Definitions edit

A Gorenstein ring is a commutative Noetherian ring such that each localization at a prime ideal is a Gorenstein local ring, as defined below. A Gorenstein ring is in particular Cohen–Macaulay.

One elementary characterization is: a Noetherian local ring R of dimension zero (equivalently, with R of finite length as an R-module) is Gorenstein if and only if HomR(k, R) has dimension 1 as a k-vector space, where k is the residue field of R. Equivalently, R has simple socle as an R-module.[1] More generally, a Noetherian local ring R is Gorenstein if and only if there is a regular sequence a1,...,an in the maximal ideal of R such that the quotient ring R/( a1,...,an) is Gorenstein of dimension zero.

For example, if R is a commutative graded algebra over a field k such that R has finite dimension as a k-vector space, R = kR1 ⊕ ... ⊕ Rm, then R is Gorenstein if and only if it satisfies Poincaré duality, meaning that the top graded piece Rm has dimension 1 and the product Ra × RmaRm is a perfect pairing for every a.[2]

Another interpretation of the Gorenstein property as a type of duality, for not necessarily graded rings, is: for a field F, a commutative F-algebra R of finite dimension as an F-vector space (hence of dimension zero as a ring) is Gorenstein if and only if there is an F-linear map e: RF such that the symmetric bilinear form (x, y) := e(xy) on R (as an F-vector space) is nondegenerate.[3]

For a commutative Noetherian local ring (R, m, k) of Krull dimension n, the following are equivalent:[4]

  • R has finite injective dimension as an R-module;
  • R has injective dimension n as an R-module;
  • The Ext group   for in while  
  •   for some i > n;
  •   for all i < n and  
  • R is an n-dimensional Gorenstein ring.

A (not necessarily commutative) ring R is called Gorenstein if R has finite injective dimension both as a left R-module and as a right R-module. If R is a local ring, R is said to be a local Gorenstein ring.

Examples edit

  • Every local complete intersection ring, in particular every regular local ring, is Gorenstein.
  • The ring R = k[x,y,z]/(x2, y2, xz, yz, z2xy) is a 0-dimensional Gorenstein ring that is not a complete intersection ring. In more detail: a basis for R as a k-vector space is given by:   R is Gorenstein because the socle has dimension 1 as a k-vector space, spanned by z2. Alternatively, one can observe that R satisfies Poincaré duality when it is viewed as a graded ring with x, y, z all of the same degree. Finally. R is not a complete intersection because it has 3 generators and a minimal set of 5 (not 3) relations.
  • The ring R = k[x,y]/(x2, y2, xy) is a 0-dimensional Cohen–Macaulay ring that is not a Gorenstein ring. In more detail: a basis for R as a k-vector space is given by:   R is not Gorenstein because the socle has dimension 2 (not 1) as a k-vector space, spanned by x and y.

Properties edit

  • A Noetherian local ring is Gorenstein if and only if its completion is Gorenstein.[5]
  • The canonical module of a Gorenstein local ring R is isomorphic to R. In geometric terms, it follows that the standard dualizing complex of a Gorenstein scheme X over a field is simply a line bundle (viewed as a complex in degree −dim(X)); this line bundle is called the canonical bundle of X. Using the canonical bundle, Serre duality takes the same form for Gorenstein schemes as in the smooth case.
In the context of graded rings R, the canonical module of a Gorenstein ring R is isomorphic to R with some degree shift.[6]
  • For a Gorenstein local ring (R, m, k) of dimension n, Grothendieck local duality takes the following form.[7] Let E(k) be the injective hull of the residue field k as an R-module. Then, for any finitely generated R-module M and integer i, the local cohomology group   is dual to   in the sense that:
 
  • Stanley showed that for a finitely generated commutative graded algebra R over a field k such that R is an integral domain, the Gorenstein property depends only on the Cohen–Macaulay property together with the Hilbert series
 
Namely, a graded domain R is Gorenstein if and only if it is Cohen–Macaulay and the Hilbert series is symmetric in the sense that
 
for some integer s, where n is the dimension of R.[8]
  • 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 at most 2, Serre showed that R is Gorenstein if and only if it is a complete intersection.[9] There is also a structure theorem for Gorenstein rings of codimension 3 in terms of the Pfaffians of a skew-symmetric matrix, by Buchsbaum and Eisenbud.[10]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Proposition 21.5.
  2. ^ Huneke (1999), Theorem 9.1.
  3. ^ Lam (1999), Theorems 3.15 and 16.23.
  4. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 18.1.
  5. ^ Matsumura (1989), Theorem 18.3.
  6. ^ Eisenbud (1995), section 21.11.
  7. ^ Bruns & Herzog (1993), Theorem 3.5.8.
  8. ^ Stanley (1978), Theorem 4.4.
  9. ^ Eisenbud (1995), Corollary 21.20.
  10. ^ Bruns & Herzog (1993), Theorem 3.4.1.

References edit

  • Bass, Hyman (1963), "On the ubiquity of Gorenstein rings", Mathematische Zeitschrift, 82: 8–28, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.152.1137, doi:10.1007/BF01112819, ISSN 0025-5874, MR 0153708
  • Bruns, Winfried; Herzog, Jürgen (1993), Cohen–Macaulay rings, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 39, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-41068-7, MR 1251956
  • 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
  • Gorenstein, Daniel (1952), "An arithmetic theory of adjoint plane curves", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 72: 414–436, doi:10.2307/1990710, ISSN 0002-9947, JSTOR 1990710, MR 0049591
  • Hartshorne, Robin (1967), Local Cohomology. A seminar given by A. Grothendieck, Harvard University, Fall 1961, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, vol. 41, Berlin-New York: Springer-Verlag, MR 0224620
  • "Gorenstein ring", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]
  • Huneke, Craig (1999), "Hyman Bass and ubiquity: Gorenstein rings", Algebra, K-Theory, Groups, and Education, American Mathematical Society, pp. 55–78, arXiv:math/0209199, doi:10.1090/conm/243/03686, MR 1732040
  • Lam, Tsit Yuen (1999), Lectures on modules and rings, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 189, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-0525-8, ISBN 978-0-387-98428-5, MR 1653294
  • Macaulay, Francis Sowerby (1934), "Modern algebra and polynomial ideals", Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 30 (1): 27–46, Bibcode:1934PCPS...30...27M, doi:10.1017/S0305004100012354, ISSN 0305-0041, JFM 60.0096.02
  • Matsumura, Hideyuki (1989), Commutative Ring Theory, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-36764-6, MR 0879273
  • Serre, Jean-Pierre (1961), Sur les modules projectifs, Séminaire Dubreil. Algèbre et théorie des nombres, vol. 14, pp. 1–16
  • Stanley, Richard P. (1978), "Hilbert functions of graded algebras", Advances in Mathematics, 28 (1): 57–83, doi:10.1016/0001-8708(78)90045-2, MR 0485835

See also edit

gorenstein, ring, commutative, algebra, gorenstein, local, ring, commutative, noetherian, local, ring, with, finite, injective, dimension, module, there, many, equivalent, conditions, some, them, listed, below, often, saying, that, self, dual, some, sense, wer. In commutative algebra a Gorenstein local ring is a commutative Noetherian local ring R with finite injective dimension as an R module There are many equivalent conditions some of them listed below often saying that a Gorenstein ring is self dual in some sense Gorenstein rings were introduced by Grothendieck in his 1961 seminar published in Hartshorne 1967 The name comes from a duality property of singular plane curves studied by Gorenstein 1952 who was fond of claiming that he did not understand the definition of a Gorenstein ring citation needed The zero dimensional case had been studied by Macaulay 1934 Serre 1961 and Bass 1963 publicized the concept of Gorenstein rings Frobenius rings are noncommutative analogs of zero dimensional Gorenstein rings Gorenstein schemes are the geometric version of Gorenstein rings 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 Definitions 2 Examples 3 Properties 4 Notes 5 References 6 See alsoDefinitions editA Gorenstein ring is a commutative Noetherian ring such that each localization at a prime ideal is a Gorenstein local ring as defined below A Gorenstein ring is in particular Cohen Macaulay One elementary characterization is a Noetherian local ring R of dimension zero equivalently with R of finite length as an R module is Gorenstein if and only if HomR k R has dimension 1 as a k vector space where k is the residue field of R Equivalently R has simple socle as an R module 1 More generally a Noetherian local ring R is Gorenstein if and only if there is a regular sequence a1 an in the maximal ideal of R such that the quotient ring R a1 an is Gorenstein of dimension zero For example if R is a commutative graded algebra over a field k such that R has finite dimension as a k vector space R k R1 Rm then R is Gorenstein if and only if it satisfies Poincare duality meaning that the top graded piece Rm has dimension 1 and the product Ra Rm a Rm is a perfect pairing for every a 2 Another interpretation of the Gorenstein property as a type of duality for not necessarily graded rings is for a field F a commutative F algebra R of finite dimension as an F vector space hence of dimension zero as a ring is Gorenstein if and only if there is an F linear map e R F such that the symmetric bilinear form x y e xy on R as an F vector space is nondegenerate 3 For a commutative Noetherian local ring R m k of Krull dimension n the following are equivalent 4 R has finite injective dimension as an R module R has injective dimension n as an R module The Ext group Ext R i k R 0 displaystyle operatorname Ext R i k R 0 nbsp for i n while Ext R n k R k displaystyle operatorname Ext R n k R cong k nbsp Ext R i k R 0 displaystyle operatorname Ext R i k R 0 nbsp for some i gt n Ext R i k R 0 displaystyle operatorname Ext R i k R 0 nbsp for all i lt n and Ext R n k R k displaystyle operatorname Ext R n k R cong k nbsp R is an n dimensional Gorenstein ring A not necessarily commutative ring R is called Gorenstein if R has finite injective dimension both as a left R module and as a right R module If R is a local ring R is said to be a local Gorenstein ring Examples editEvery local complete intersection ring in particular every regular local ring is Gorenstein The ring R k x y z x2 y2 xz yz z2 xy is a 0 dimensional Gorenstein ring that is not a complete intersection ring In more detail a basis for R as a k vector space is given by 1 x y z z 2 displaystyle 1 x y z z 2 nbsp R is Gorenstein because the socle has dimension 1 as a k vector space spanned by z2 Alternatively one can observe that R satisfies Poincare duality when it is viewed as a graded ring with x y z all of the same degree Finally R is not a complete intersection because it has 3 generators and a minimal set of 5 not 3 relations The ring R k x y x2 y2 xy is a 0 dimensional Cohen Macaulay ring that is not a Gorenstein ring In more detail a basis for R as a k vector space is given by 1 x y displaystyle 1 x y nbsp R is not Gorenstein because the socle has dimension 2 not 1 as a k vector space spanned by x and y Properties editA Noetherian local ring is Gorenstein if and only if its completion is Gorenstein 5 The canonical module of a Gorenstein local ring R is isomorphic to R In geometric terms it follows that the standard dualizing complex of a Gorenstein scheme X over a field is simply a line bundle viewed as a complex in degree dim X this line bundle is called the canonical bundle of X Using the canonical bundle Serre duality takes the same form for Gorenstein schemes as in the smooth case In the context of graded rings R the canonical module of a Gorenstein ring R is isomorphic to R with some degree shift 6 For a Gorenstein local ring R m k of dimension n Grothendieck local duality takes the following form 7 Let E k be the injective hull of the residue field k as an R module Then for any finitely generated R module M and integer i the local cohomology group H m i M displaystyle H m i M nbsp is dual to Ext R n i M R displaystyle operatorname Ext R n i M R nbsp in the sense that H m i M Hom R Ext R n i M R E k displaystyle H m i M cong operatorname Hom R operatorname Ext R n i M R E k nbsp dd Stanley showed that for a finitely generated commutative graded algebra R over a field k such that R is an integral domain the Gorenstein property depends only on the Cohen Macaulay property together with the Hilbert seriesf t j dim k R j t j displaystyle f t sum nolimits j dim k R j t j nbsp dd Namely a graded domain R is Gorenstein if and only if it is Cohen Macaulay and the Hilbert series is symmetric in the sense thatf 1 t 1 n t s f t displaystyle f left tfrac 1 t right 1 n t s f t nbsp dd for some integer s where n is the dimension of R 8 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 at most 2 Serre showed that R is Gorenstein if and only if it is a complete intersection 9 There is also a structure theorem for Gorenstein rings of codimension 3 in terms of the Pfaffians of a skew symmetric matrix by Buchsbaum and Eisenbud 10 Notes edit Eisenbud 1995 Proposition 21 5 Huneke 1999 Theorem 9 1 Lam 1999 Theorems 3 15 and 16 23 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 18 1 Matsumura 1989 Theorem 18 3 Eisenbud 1995 section 21 11 Bruns amp Herzog 1993 Theorem 3 5 8 Stanley 1978 Theorem 4 4 Eisenbud 1995 Corollary 21 20 Bruns amp Herzog 1993 Theorem 3 4 1 References editBass Hyman 1963 On the ubiquity of Gorenstein rings Mathematische Zeitschrift 82 8 28 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 152 1137 doi 10 1007 BF01112819 ISSN 0025 5874 MR 0153708 Bruns 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 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 Gorenstein Daniel 1952 An arithmetic theory of adjoint plane curves Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 72 414 436 doi 10 2307 1990710 ISSN 0002 9947 JSTOR 1990710 MR 0049591 Hartshorne Robin 1967 Local Cohomology A seminar given by A Grothendieck Harvard University Fall 1961 Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol 41 Berlin New York Springer Verlag MR 0224620 Gorenstein ring Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Huneke Craig 1999 Hyman Bass and ubiquity Gorenstein rings Algebra K Theory Groups and Education American Mathematical Society pp 55 78 arXiv math 0209199 doi 10 1090 conm 243 03686 MR 1732040 Lam Tsit Yuen 1999 Lectures on modules and rings Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 189 Berlin New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0525 8 ISBN 978 0 387 98428 5 MR 1653294 Macaulay Francis Sowerby 1934 Modern algebra and polynomial ideals Mathematical Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 30 1 27 46 Bibcode 1934PCPS 30 27M doi 10 1017 S0305004100012354 ISSN 0305 0041 JFM 60 0096 02 Matsumura Hideyuki 1989 Commutative Ring Theory Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36764 6 MR 0879273 Serre Jean Pierre 1961 Sur les modules projectifs Seminaire Dubreil Algebre et theorie des nombres vol 14 pp 1 16 Stanley Richard P 1978 Hilbert functions of graded algebras Advances in Mathematics 28 1 57 83 doi 10 1016 0001 8708 78 90045 2 MR 0485835See also editCommutative algebra Ring theory Wiles s proof of Fermat s Last Theorem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gorenstein ring amp oldid 1164724487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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