|
|
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| In [[mathematics]], the '''residue field''' is a basic construction in [[commutative algebra]]. If ''R'' is a [[commutative ring]] and ''m'' is a [[maximal ideal]], then the residue field is the [[quotient ring]] ''k'' = ''R''/''m'', which is a [[field (mathematics)|field]]. Frequently, ''R'' is a [[local ring]] and ''m'' is then its unique maximal ideal.
| | Friends contact her Claude Gulledge. Managing people is how she tends to make cash and she will not alter it anytime soon. The factor I adore most flower arranging and now I have time to consider on new things. Arizona has usually been my residing place but my wife desires us to move.<br><br>Feel free to visit my web blog [http://www.shownetbook.com/enone/xe/?document_srl=3029968 www.shownetbook.com] |
| | |
| This construction is applied in [[algebraic geometry]], where to every point ''x'' of a [[scheme (mathematics)|scheme]] ''X'' one associates its '''residue field''' ''k''(''x''). One can say a little loosely that the residue field of a point of an abstract [[algebraic variety]] is the 'natural domain' for the coordinates of the point.
| |
| | |
| ==Definition==
| |
| Suppose that ''R'' is a commutative [[local ring]], with the maximal ideal ''m''. Then the '''residue field''' is the quotient ring ''R''/''m''.
| |
| | |
| Now suppose that ''X'' is a [[scheme (mathematics)|scheme]] and ''x'' is a point of ''X''. By the definition of scheme, we may find an affine neighbourhood ''U'' = Spec(''A''), with ''A'' some [[commutative ring]]. Considered in the neighbourhood ''U'', the point ''x'' corresponds to a [[prime ideal]] ''p'' ⊂ ''A'' (see [[Zariski topology]]). The ''[[local ring]]'' of ''X'' in ''x'' is by definition the [[localization of a ring|localization]] ''R'' = ''A<sub>p</sub>'', with the maximal ideal ''m'' = ''p·A<sub>p</sub>''. Applying the construction above, we obtain the '''residue field of the point ''x'' ''':
| |
| | |
| :''k''(''x'') := ''A''<sub>''p''</sub> / ''p''·''A''<sub>''p''</sub>.
| |
| | |
| One can prove that this definition does not depend on the choice of the affine neighbourhood ''U''.<ref>Intuitively, the residue field of a point is a local invariant. Axioms of schemes are set up in such a way as to assure the compatibility between various affine open neighborhoods of a point, which implies the statement.</ref>
| |
| | |
| A point is called [[rational point|''K''-rational]] for a certain field ''K'', if ''k''(''x'') ⊂ ''K''.
| |
| | |
| ==Example==
| |
| Consider the [[affine line]] '''A'''<sup>1</sup>(''k'') = Spec(''k''[''t'']) over a [[field (mathematics)|field]] ''k''. If ''k'' is [[algebraically closed field|algebraically closed]], there are exactly two types of prime ideals, namely
| |
| | |
| *(''t'' − ''a''), ''a'' ∈ ''k''
| |
| *(0), the zero-ideal.
| |
| | |
| The residue fields are
| |
| | |
| *<math>k[t]_{(t-a)}/(t-a)k[t]_{(t-a)} \cong k</math>
| |
| *<math>k[t]_{(0)} \cong k(t)</math>, the function field over ''k'' in one variable.
| |
| | |
| If ''k'' is not algebraically closed, then more types arise, for example if ''k'' = '''R''', then the prime ideal (''x''<sup>2</sup> + 1) has residue field isomorphic to '''C'''.
| |
| | |
| ==Properties==
| |
| * For a scheme locally of [[morphism of finite type|finite type]] over a field ''k'', a point ''x'' is closed if and only if ''k''(''x'') is a finite extension of the base field ''k''. This is a geometric formulation of [[Hilbert's Nullstellensatz]]. In the above example, the points of the first kind are closed, having residue field ''k'', whereas the second point is the [[generic point]], having [[transcendence degree]] 1 over ''k''.
| |
| * A morphism Spec(''K'') → ''X'', ''K'' some field, is equivalent to giving a point ''x'' ∈ ''X'' and an [[field extension|extension]] ''K''/''k''(''x'').
| |
| * The [[Krull dimension|dimension]] of a scheme of finite type over a field is equal to the transcendence degree of the residue field of the generic point.
| |
| | |
| == Notes ==
| |
| | |
| {{reflist}}
| |
| | |
| ==References==
| |
| * {{Citation | last1=Hartshorne | first1=Robin | author1-link = Robin Hartshorne | title=[[Algebraic Geometry (book)|Algebraic Geometry]] | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | location=Berlin, New York | isbn=978-0-387-90244-9 | id={{MathSciNet | id = 0463157}} | year=1977}}, section II.2
| |
| | |
| [[Category:Algebraic geometry|*]]
| |
Friends contact her Claude Gulledge. Managing people is how she tends to make cash and she will not alter it anytime soon. The factor I adore most flower arranging and now I have time to consider on new things. Arizona has usually been my residing place but my wife desires us to move.
Feel free to visit my web blog www.shownetbook.com