Discrete valuation ring

Concept in abstract algebra

In abstract algebra, a discrete valuation ring (DVR) is a principal ideal domain (PID) with exactly one non-zero maximal ideal.

This means a DVR is an integral domain R that satisfies any one of the following equivalent conditions:

  1. R is a local principal ideal domain, and not a field.
  2. R is a valuation ring with a value group isomorphic to the integers under addition.
  3. R is a local Dedekind domain and not a field.
  4. R is a Noetherian local domain whose maximal ideal is principal, and not a field.[1]
  5. R is an integrally closed Noetherian local ring with Krull dimension one.
  6. R is a principal ideal domain with a unique non-zero prime ideal.
  7. R is a principal ideal domain with a unique irreducible element (up to multiplication by units).
  8. R is a unique factorization domain with a unique irreducible element (up to multiplication by units).
  9. R is Noetherian, not a field, and every nonzero fractional ideal of R is irreducible in the sense that it cannot be written as a finite intersection of fractional ideals properly containing it.
  10. There is some discrete valuation ν on the field of fractions K of R such that R = {0} {\displaystyle \cup } {x {\displaystyle \in } K : ν(x) ≥ 0}.

Examples

Algebraic

Localization of Dedekind rings

Let Z ( 2 ) := { z / n z , n Z , n  is odd } {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(2)}:=\{z/n\mid z,n\in \mathbb {Z} ,\,\,n{\text{ is odd}}\}} . Then, the field of fractions of Z ( 2 ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(2)}} is Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} } . For any nonzero element r {\displaystyle r} of Q {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} } , we can apply unique factorization to the numerator and denominator of r to write r as 2k z/n where z, n, and k are integers with z and n odd. In this case, we define ν(r)=k. Then Z ( 2 ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(2)}} is the discrete valuation ring corresponding to ν. The maximal ideal of Z ( 2 ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(2)}} is the principal ideal generated by 2, i.e. 2 Z ( 2 ) {\displaystyle 2\mathbb {Z} _{(2)}} , and the "unique" irreducible element (up to units) is 2 (this is also known as a uniformizing parameter). Note that Z ( 2 ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(2)}} is the localization of the Dedekind domain Z {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} } at the prime ideal generated by 2.

More generally, any localization of a Dedekind domain at a non-zero prime ideal is a discrete valuation ring; in practice, this is frequently how discrete valuation rings arise. In particular, we can define rings

Z ( p ) := { z n | z , n Z , p n } {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(p)}:=\left.\left\{{\frac {z}{n}}\,\right|z,n\in \mathbb {Z} ,p\nmid n\right\}}

for any prime p in complete analogy.

p-adic integers

The ring Z p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{p}} of p-adic integers is a DVR, for any prime p {\displaystyle p} . Here p {\displaystyle p} is an irreducible element; the valuation assigns to each p {\displaystyle p} -adic integer x {\displaystyle x} the largest integer k {\displaystyle k} such that p k {\displaystyle p^{k}} divides x {\displaystyle x} .

Formal power series

Another important example of a DVR is the ring of formal power series R = k [ [ T ] ] {\displaystyle R=k[[T]]} in one variable T {\displaystyle T} over some field k {\displaystyle k} . The "unique" irreducible element is T {\displaystyle T} , the maximal ideal of R {\displaystyle R} is the principal ideal generated by T {\displaystyle T} , and the valuation ν {\displaystyle \nu } assigns to each power series the index (i.e. degree) of the first non-zero coefficient.

If we restrict ourselves to real or complex coefficients, we can consider the ring of power series in one variable that converge in a neighborhood of 0 (with the neighborhood depending on the power series). This is a discrete valuation ring. This is useful for building intuition with the Valuative criterion of properness.

Ring in function field

For an example more geometrical in nature, take the ring R = {f/g : f, g polynomials in R[X] and g(0) ≠ 0}, considered as a subring of the field of rational functions R(X) in the variable X. R can be identified with the ring of all real-valued rational functions defined (i.e. finite) in a neighborhood of 0 on the real axis (with the neighborhood depending on the function). It is a discrete valuation ring; the "unique" irreducible element is X and the valuation assigns to each function f the order (possibly 0) of the zero of f at 0. This example provides the template for studying general algebraic curves near non-singular points, the algebraic curve in this case being the real line.

Scheme-theoretic

Henselian trait

For a DVR R {\displaystyle R} it is common to write the fraction field as K = Frac ( R ) {\displaystyle K={\text{Frac}}(R)} and κ = R / m {\displaystyle \kappa =R/{\mathfrak {m}}} the residue field. These correspond to the generic and closed points of S = Spec ( R ) . {\displaystyle S={\text{Spec}}(R).} For example, the closed point of Spec ( Z p ) {\displaystyle {\text{Spec}}(\mathbb {Z} _{p})} is F p {\displaystyle \mathbb {F} _{p}} and the generic point is Q p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} _{p}} . Sometimes this is denoted as

η S s {\displaystyle \eta \to S\leftarrow s}

where η {\displaystyle \eta } is the generic point and s {\displaystyle s} is the closed point .

Localization of a point on a curve

Given an algebraic curve ( X , O X ) {\displaystyle (X,{\mathcal {O}}_{X})} , the local ring O X , p {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}_{X,{\mathfrak {p}}}} at a smooth point p {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {p}}} is a discrete valuation ring, because it is a principal valuation ring. Note because the point p {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {p}}} is smooth, the completion of the local ring is isomorphic to the completion of the localization of A 1 {\displaystyle \mathbb {A} ^{1}} at some point q {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {q}}} .

Uniformizing parameter

Given a DVR R, any irreducible element of R is a generator for the unique maximal ideal of R and vice versa. Such an element is also called a uniformizing parameter of R (or a uniformizing element, a uniformizer, or a prime element).

If we fix a uniformizing parameter t, then M=(t) is the unique maximal ideal of R, and every other non-zero ideal is a power of M, i.e. has the form (t k) for some k≥0. All the powers of t are distinct, and so are the powers of M. Every non-zero element x of R can be written in the form αt k with α a unit in R and k≥0, both uniquely determined by x. The valuation is given by ν(x) = kv(t). So to understand the ring completely, one needs to know the group of units of R and how the units interact additively with the powers of t.

The function v also makes any discrete valuation ring into a Euclidean domain.[citation needed]

Topology

Every discrete valuation ring, being a local ring, carries a natural topology and is a topological ring. We can also give it a metric space structure where the distance between two elements x and y can be measured as follows:

| x y | = 2 ν ( x y ) {\displaystyle |x-y|=2^{-\nu (x-y)}}

(or with any other fixed real number > 1 in place of 2). Intuitively: an element z is "small" and "close to 0" iff its valuation ν(z) is large. The function |x-y|, supplemented by |0|=0, is the restriction of an absolute value defined on the field of fractions of the discrete valuation ring.

A DVR is compact if and only if it is complete and its residue field R/M is a finite field.

Examples of complete DVRs include

  • the ring of p-adic integers and
  • the ring of formal power series over any field

For a given DVR, one often passes to its completion, a complete DVR containing the given ring that is often easier to study. This completion procedure can be thought of in a geometrical way as passing from rational functions to power series, or from rational numbers to the reals.

Returning to our examples: the ring of all formal power series in one variable with real coefficients is the completion of the ring of rational functions defined (i.e. finite) in a neighborhood of 0 on the real line; it is also the completion of the ring of all real power series that converge near 0. The completion of Z ( p ) = Q Z p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{(p)}=\mathbb {Q} \cap \mathbb {Z} _{p}} (which can be seen as the set of all rational numbers that are p-adic integers) is the ring of all p-adic integers Zp.

See also

References

  1. ^ "ac.commutative algebra - Condition for a local ring whose maximal ideal is principal to be Noetherian". MathOverflow.