Localization in integral domains

In summary, there is an isomorphism between the fields R/p and R_p/(pR_p). However, there is no evidence that p is a maximal ideal (in a general ring with a general ideal a quotient R/p is a field if and only if p is maximal).
  • #1
SiddharthM
176
0
i'm working through the following text and I think I found an error please let me know if I'm totally wrong.

Janusz, Gerald J. Algebraic Number Fields

and I'm starting with the 3rd exercise on page 3. It is as following:

let R be an integral domain and p a prime ideal of R. Show there is an isomorphism between the fields R/p and R_p/(pR_p).

Note that R_p is the localization at the multiplicative set S=R-p (this is multiplicative b/c p is a prime ideal). Now I believe that pR_p is a maximal ideal: this follows because if it were strictly contained in a maximal ideal of R_p then this would be a prime ideal of R_p different from pR_p but this corresponds to a prime ideal of R distinct from p. This corresponding prime ideal in R is in our multiplicative set at which we localized so we have invertible elements in a maximal ideal, a contradiction (maximality implies proper containment).

I used the fact that there is a bijection between prime ideals of R_p and prime ideals of R that don't intersect S. Also that all maximal ideals are prime.

So I believe that R_p/pR_p is a field (because it's a quotient of a ring by a maximal ideal). But there is nothing to suggest that p is a maximal ideal (in a general ring with a general ideal a quotient R/p is a field if and only if p is maximal) unless we are in a PID (because then prime ideals are maximal). So if this result were true it would mean that in ANY integral domain a prime ideal is maximal i.e. that the quotient of an integral domain by one of it's prime ideals is a field, there is an easy counterexample.

Z[x] is an integral domain and <x> is prime (because Z[x]/<x>=Z is an integral domain) but Z[x]/<x>=Z is most definitely NOT a field.

What do you think?

Cheers
 
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  • #2
Hm...I looked at the book and I didn't think that was the exercise verbatim...how odd, you're right, that is definitely not correct. I think what they mean to say is show that there is an isomorphism between the fields Rp/pRp and quotient field of R/P (this is certainly possible since R/P is an integral domain since P is prime). There is certainly an isomorphism between these two fields. Let Q(R/P) denote the quotient field of R/P then you can show this by the map f: Q(R/P) ---> Rp/pRp by f((a+P)/(b+P)) = (a/b) + pRp. Check this is a well-defined map and then show it is an isomorphism (there is of course a slightly simpler way of doing this by using the universality of localization).

You are certainly correct pRp is a maximal ideal, since Rp is a local ring with pRp as its unique maximal ideal. Note that a ring R (commutative with 1) is a local ring if and only if the set of nonunits form an ideal. Thus note in pRp, the nonunits are in pRp and they form an ideal, hence Rp is local with maximal ideal pRp. This is true for any prime ideal of a ring R.
 
  • #3
SiddharthM said:
But there is nothing to suggest that p is a maximal ideal (in a general ring with a general ideal a quotient R/p is a field if and only if p is maximal) unless we are in a PID (because then prime ideals are maximal).
Or a Dedekind domain -- or any one-dimensional integral domain. Given the subject, the author probably had some of those in mind when he said "integral domain".
 
  • #4
Or a Dedekind domain -- or any one-dimensional integral domain. Given the subject, the author probably had some of those in mind when he said "integral domain"

I contemplated this, too and it would certainly make since in light of the fact that algebraic integer rings are Dedekind domains, but I feel it would have been specified and I looked in the textbook and I don't even think the concept of a Dedekind domain had been introduced.
 

What is localization in integral domains?

Localization is a mathematical concept that involves creating a new ring by inverting a subset of elements in an integral domain. This process allows us to extend the operations of division and fractions to integral domains, where they may not be defined before.

Why is localization important in mathematics?

Localization is important because it allows us to solve equations that may not have solutions in the original integral domain. It also helps us to study the structure and properties of integral domains in a more general and abstract way.

What is the process of localization?

The process of localization involves taking an integral domain D and a subset S of D, and creating a new ring by inverting all the elements in S. This new ring is denoted by D[S-1] and is called the localization of D at S.

What is the significance of the subset S in localization?

The subset S plays a crucial role in localization as it determines which elements are inverted and which are not. This, in turn, affects the structure and properties of the new ring D[S-1]. The choice of S is often related to the specific problem or equation we are trying to solve.

What are some applications of localization in integral domains?

Localization has many applications in mathematics, such as in algebraic number theory, algebraic geometry, and commutative algebra. It is also used in solving equations, studying the structure of rings, and proving other theorems in abstract algebra.

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