Integral closure
From Free net encyclopedia
Integral Closure of a Ring
In abstract algebra, the concept of integral closure is a generalization of the set of all algebraic integers. It is one of many closures in mathematics.
Let S be an integral domain with R a subring of S. An element s of S is said to be integral over R if s is a root of some monic polynomial with coefficients in R. ("Monic" means that the leading coefficient is 1, the identity element of R).
One can show that the set of all elements of S that are integral over R is a subring of S containing R; it is called the integral closure of R in S. If every element of S that is integral over R is already in R then R is said to be integrally closed in S. (So, intuitively, "integrally closed" means that R is "already big enough" to contain all the elements that are integral over R). An equivalent definition is that R is integrally closed in S iff the integral closure of R in S is equal to R (in general the integral closure is a superset of R). The terminology is justified by the fact that the integral closure of R in S is always integrally closed in S, and is in fact the smallest subring of S that contains R and is integrally closed in S.
In the special case where S is the field of fractions of R, the integral closure of R in S is named simply the integral closure of R, and if R is integrally closed in S, then R is said to be integrally closed.
For example, the integers Z are integrally closed (the fraction field of Z is Q, and the elements of Q that are integral over Z are just the elements of Z (!), hence the integral closure of Z in Q is Z). The integral closure of Z in the complex numbers C is the set of all algebraic integers.
See also algebraic closure; this is a special case of integral closure when R and S are fields.
Integral Closure of an ideal
In commutative algebra there is also a concept of the integral closure of an ideal. The integral closure of an ideal <math>I \subset R</math>, usually denoted by <math>\overline I</math>, is the set of all elements <math>r \in R</math> such that there exists a monic polynomial <math>x^n + a_{1} x^{n-1} + \ldots + a_{n-1} x^1 + a_n</math> with <math>a_i \in I^i</math> with <math>r</math> as a root. The integral closure of an ideal is easily seen to be in the radical of an ideal.
There are alternate definitions as well.
- <math>r \in \overline I</math> if there exists a <math>c \in R</math> not contained in any minimal prime, such that <math>c r^n \in I^n</math> for all sufficiently large <math>n</math>.
- <math> r \in \overline I</math> if in the normalized blow-up of <math>I</math>, the pull back of <math>r</math> is contained in the inverse image of <math>I</math>. The blow-up of an ideal is an operation of schemes which replaces the given ideal with a principal ideal. The normalization of a scheme is simply the scheme corresponding to the integral closure of all of its rings.
References
- R. Hartshorne, Algebraic Geometry, Springer-Verlag (1977)
- M. Atiyah, I. Macdonald Introduction to commutative algebra Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., Reading, Mass.-London-Don Mills, Ont. 1969
- H. Matsumura Commutative ring theory. Translated from the Japanese by M. Reid. Second edition. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, 8.