scholarly journals Perinormalitas di Daerah Krull (Perinormality on Krull Domains)

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qonita Qurrota A'yun ◽  
Sri Wahyuni

Daerah integral R dikatakan perinormal jika untuk setiap overring (lokal) T dari R yang memenuhi kondisi going-down, maka T merupakan lokalisasi dari R pada ideal prima. Perinormalitas merupakan salah satu sifat ketertutupan integral. Dengan memperhatikan bahwa klosur integral dari daerah normal Noether merupakan daerah Krull, akan ditunjukkan bagaimana sifat perinormalitas di daerah Krull.An integral domain R is said to be perinormal if whenever T is a (local) overring of R such that the inclusion R in T satisfies going-down, it follows that T is a localization of R necessarily at a prime ideal. Perinormality is one of integral closedness property. As the integral closure of any Noetherian normal domain is Krull, it will be shown how perinormality behaves on Krull domains.

2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (02) ◽  
pp. 287-298
Author(s):  
Gyu Whan Chang ◽  
HwanKoo Kim

Let D be an integral domain with quotient field K, [Formula: see text] be the integral closure of D in K, and D[w] be the w-integral closure of D in K; so [Formula: see text], and equality holds when D is Noetherian or dim(D) = 1. The Mori–Nagata theorem states that if D is Noetherian, then [Formula: see text] is a Krull domain; it has also been investigated when [Formula: see text] is a Dedekind domain. We study integral domains D such that D[w] is a Krull domain. We also provide an example of an integral domain D such that [Formula: see text], t-dim(D) = 1, [Formula: see text] is a Prüfer v-multiplication domain with t-dim([Formula: see text]) = 2, and D[w] is a UFD.


1966 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 1024-1030 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack Ohm

A Prüfer domain is an integral domainDwith the property that for every proper prime idealPofDthe quotient ringDPis a valuation ring. Examples of such domains are valuation rings and Dedekind domains, a Dedekind domain being merely a noetherian Prüfer domain. The integral closure of the integers in an infinite algebraic extension of the rationals is another example of a Prüfer domain (5, p. 555, Theorem 8). This third example has been studied initially by Krull (4) and then by Nakano (8).


1982 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 196-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. D. Anderson ◽  
David F. Anderson

Let R = ⊕α∊гRα be an integral domain graded by an arbitrary torsionless grading monoid Γ. In this paper we consider to what extent conditions on the homogeneous elements or ideals of R carry over to all elements or ideals of R. For example, in Section 3 we show that if each pair of nonzero homogeneous elements of R has a GCD, then R is a GCD-domain. This paper originated with the question of when a graded UFD (every homogeneous element is a product of principal primes) is a UFD. If R is Z+ or Z-graded, it is known that a graded UFD is actually a UFD, while in general this is not the case. In Section 3 we consider graded GCD-domains, in Section 4 graded UFD's, in Section 5 graded Krull domains, and in Section 6 graded π-domains.


Author(s):  
Robert Gilmer

AbstractSuppose D is an integral domain with quotient field K and that L is an extension field of K. We show in Theorem 4 that if the complete integral closure of D is an intersection of Archimedean valuation domains on K, then the complete integral closure of D in L is an intersection of Archimedean valuation domains on L; this answers a question raised by Gilmer and Heinzer in 1965.


1982 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie G. Roberts

Let A be the co-ordinate ring of a reduced curve over a field k. This means that A is an algebra of finite type over k, A has no nilpotent elements, and that if P is a minimal prime ideal of A, then A/P is an integral domain of Krull dimension one. Let M be a maximal ideal of A. Then G(A) (the graded ring of A relative to M) is defined to be . We get the same graded ring if we first localize at M, and then form the graded ring of AM relative to the maximal ideal MAM. That isLet Ā be the integral closure of A. If P1, P2, …, Ps are the minimal primes of A thenwhere A/Pi is a domain and is the integral closure of A/Pi in its quotient field.


1973 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 272-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glen H. Suter

With reservations, one can think of abstract algebra as the study of what consequences can be drawn from the axioms associated with certain concrete algebraic structures. Two important examples of such concrete algebraic structures are the integers and the rational numbers. The integers and the rational numbers have two properties which are not in general mirrored in the abstract axiom systems associated with them. That is, the integers and the rational numbers both have effectively computable metrics and their algebraic operations are effectively computable. The study of abstract algebraic systems which possess effectively computable algebraic operations has produced many interesting results. One can think of a computable algebraic structure as one whose elements have been labeled by the set of positive integers and whose operations are effectively computable. The formal definition of computable local integral domain will be given in §3. Some specific computable structures which have been studied are the integers, the rational numbers, and the rational numbers with p-adic valuation. Computable structures were studied in general by Rabin [12]. This paper concerns computable local integral domains as exemplified by the local integral domain Zp. Zp is the localization of the integers with respect to the maximal prime ideal generated by the positive prime p. We should note that the concept of local integral domain is not first order.Let the ordered pair (Q, M) stand for a local ring, where Q is the local ring and M is the unique maximal prime ideal of Q. Since most of my results are proving the existence of certain effective procedures, the assumption that Q has a principal maximal ideal M (rather than M has n generators) greatly simplifies many of the proofs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 11 (06) ◽  
pp. 1250112 ◽  
Author(s):  
PAUL-JEAN CAHEN ◽  
DAVID E. DOBBS ◽  
THOMAS G. LUCAS

For a pair of rings S ⊆ T and a nonnegative integer n, an element t ∈ T\S is said to be within n steps of S if there is a saturated chain of rings S = S0 ⊊ S1 ⊊ ⋯ ⊊ Sm = S[t] with length m ≤ n. An integral domain R is said to be n-valuative (respectively, finitely valuative) if for each nonzero element u in its quotient field, at least one of u and u-1 is within n (respectively, finitely many) steps of R. The integral closure of a finitely valuative domain is a Prüfer domain. Moreover, an n-valuative domain has at most 2n + 1 maximal ideals; and an n-valuative domain with 2n + 1 maximal ideals must be a Prüfer domain.


2007 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 417-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayman Badawi

Suppose that R is a commutative ring with 1 ≠ 0. In this paper, we introduce the concept of 2-absorbing ideal which is a generalisation of prime ideal. A nonzero proper ideal I of R is called a 2-absorbing ideal of R if whenever a, b, c ∈ R and abc ∈ I, then ab ∈ I or ac ∈ I or bc ∈ I. It is shown that a nonzero proper ideal I of R is a 2-absorbing ideal if and only if whenever I1I2I3 ⊆ I for some ideals I1,I2,I3 of R, then I1I2 ⊆ I or I2I3 ⊆ I or I1I3 ⊆ I. It is shown that if I is a 2-absorbing ideal of R, then either Rad(I) is a prime ideal of R or Rad(I) = P1 ⋂ P2 where P1,P2 are the only distinct prime ideals of R that are minimal over I. Rings with the property that every nonzero proper ideal is a 2-absorbing ideal are characterised. All 2-absorbing ideals of valuation domains and Prüfer domains are completely described. It is shown that a Noetherian domain R is a Dedekind domain if and only if a 2-absorbing ideal of R is either a maximal ideal of R or M2 for some maximal ideal M of R or M1M2 where M1,M2 are some maximal ideals of R. If RM is Noetherian for each maximal ideal M of R, then it is shown that an integral domain R is an almost Dedekind domain if and only if a 2-absorbing ideal of R is either a maximal ideal of R or M2 for some maximal ideal M of R or M1M2 where M1,M2 are some maximal ideals of R.


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (06) ◽  
pp. 1650022 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Ben Nasr

Let [Formula: see text] be an integral domain with only finitely many overrings, equivalently, a domain such that its integral closure [Formula: see text] is a Prüfer domain with finite spectrum and there are only finitely many rings between [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. Jaballah solved the problem of counting the overrings in the case [Formula: see text] but left the general case as an open problem [A. Jaballah, The number of overrings of an integrally closed domain, Expo. Math. 23 (2005) 353–360, Problem 3.4]. The purpose of this paper is to provide a solution to that problem.


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