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In abstract algebra, a Dedekind domain or Dedekind ring, named after Richard Dedekind, is an integral domain in which every nonzero proper ideal factors into a product of prime ideals. It can be shown that such a factorization is then necessarily unique up to the order of the factors. There are at least three other characterizations of Dedekind domains which are sometimes taken as the definition: see below. Note that a field is a commutative ring in which there are no nontrivial proper ideals, so that any field is a Dedekind domain, however in a rather vacuous way. Some authors add the requirement that a Dedekind domain not be a field. Many more authors state theorems for Dedekind domains with the implicit proviso that they may require trivial modifications for the case of fields. An immediate consequence of the definition is that every principal ideal domain (PID) is a Dedekind domain. In fact a Dedekind domain is a unique factorization domain (UFD) iff it is a PID.
[edit] The prehistory of Dedekind domainsIn the 19th century it became a common technique to gain insight into integral solutions of polynomial equations (i.e., Diophantine equations) using rings of algebraic numbers of higher degree. For instance, fix a positive integer m. In the attempt to determine which integers are represented by the quadratic form x2 + my2, it is natural to factor the quadratic form into For a few small values of m and n these rings of algebraic integers are PIDs, and this can be seen as an explanation of the classical successes of Fermat (m = 1,n = 4) and Euler (m = 2,3,n = 3). By this time a procedure for determining whether the ring of all algebraic integers of a given quadratic field By the 20th century, algebraists and number theorists had come to realize that the condition of being a PID is rather delicate, whereas the condition of being a Dedekind domain is quite robust. For instance the ring of ordinary integers is a PID, but as seen above the ring Another illustration of the delicate/robust dichotomy is the fact that being a Dedekind domain is, among Noetherian domains, a local property -- a Noetherian domain R is Dedekind iff for every maximal ideal M of R the localization RM is a Dedekind ring. But a local domain is a Dedekind ring iff it is a PID iff it is a discrete valuation ring (DVR), so the same local characterization cannot hold for PIDs: rather, one may say that the concept of a Dedekind ring is the globalization of that of a DVR. [edit] Alternative definitionsFor an integral domain R which is not a field, all of the following conditions are equivalent: (DD1) Every nonzero proper ideal factors into primes. (DD2) R is Noetherian, and the localization at each maximal ideal is a DVR. (DD3) Every fractional ideal of R is invertible. (DD4) R is an integrally closed, Noetherian domain with Krull dimension at most 1. Thus a Dedekind domain is a domain which satisfies any one, and hence all four, of (DD1) through (DD4). Which of these conditions one takes as the definition is therefore merely a matter of taste. In practice, it is often easiest to verify (DD4). [edit] Some examples of Dedekind domainsThe ring The other class of Dedekind rings which is arguably of equal importance comes from geometry: let C be a nonsingular geometrically integral affine algebraic curve over a field k. Then the coordinate ring k[C] of regular functions on C is a Dedekind domain. Indeed, this is essentially an algebraic translation of these geometric terms: the coordinate ring of any affine variety is, by definition, a finitely generated k-algebra, so Noetherian; moreover curve means dimension one and nonsingular implies (and, in dimension one, is equivalent to) normal, which by definition means integrally closed. Both of these constructions can be viewed as special cases of the following basic result: Theorem: Let R be a Dedekind domain with fraction field K. Let L be a finite degree field extension of K and denote by S the integral closure of R in L. Then S is itself a Dedekind domain. Applying this theorem when R is itself a PID gives us a way of building Dedekind domains out of PIDs. Taking R = Z this construction tells us precisely that rings of integers of number fields are Dedekind domains. Taking R = k[t] gives us the above case of nonsingular affine curves. It is interesting to remark that Zariski and Samuel were sufficiently taken by this construction to pose as a question whether every Dedekind domain arises in such a fashion, i.e., by starting with a PID and taking the integral closure in a finite degree field extension. A surprisingly simple negative answer was given by L. Claborn. If the situation is as above but the extension L of K is algebraic of infinite degree, then it is still possible for the integral closure S of R in L to be a Dedekind domain, but it is not guaranteed. For example, take again R = Z, K = Q and now take L to be the field [edit] Fractional ideals and the class groupLet R be an integral domain with fraction field K. A fractional ideal is a nonzero R-submodule I of K for which there exists a nonzero x in R such that (We remark that this is not exactly the same as the definition given on the page describing fractional ideals: the definition given there is that a fractional ideal is a nonzero finitely generated R-submodule of K. The two definitions are equivalent if and only if R is Noetherian. Otherwise our definition is strictly weaker, being permissive enough to make all nonzero R-submodules of R — i.e., integral ideals — fractional ideals.) Given two fractional ideals I and J, one defines their product IJ as the set of all finite sums For any fractional ideal I, one may define the fractional ideal One then tautologically has A principal fractional ideal is one of the form xR for some nonzero x in K. Note that each principal fractional ideal is invertible, the inverse of xR being simply A domain R is a PID if and only if every fractional ideal is principal. In this case, we have Frac(R) = Prin(R) = For a general domain R, it is meaningful to take the quotient of the monoid Frac(R) of all fractional ideals by the submonoid Prin(R) of principal fractional ideals. However this quotient itself is generally only a monoid. In fact it is easy to see that the class of a fractional ideal I in Frac(R)/Prin(R) is invertible if and only if I itself is invertible. Now we can appreciate (DD3): in a Dedekind domain -- and only in a Dedekind domain! -- is every fractional ideal invertible. Thus these are precisely the class of domains for which Frac(R)/Prin(R) forms a group, the ideal class group Cl(R) of R. This group is trivial if and only if R is a PID, so can be viewed as quantifying the obstruction to a general Dedekind domain being a PID. We note that for an arbitrary domain one may define the Picard group Pic(R) as the group of invertible fractional ideals Inv(R) modulo the subgroup of principal fractional ideals. For a Dedekind domain this is of course the same as the ideal class group. However, on a more general class of domains -- including Noetherian domains and Krull domains -- the ideal class group is constructed in a different way, and there is a canonical homomorphism Pic(R) which is however generally neither injective nor surjective. This is an affine analogue of the distinction between Cartier divisors and Weil divisors on a singular algebraic variety. A remarkable theorem of L. Claborn (Claborn 1966) asserts that for any abelian group G whatsoever, there exists a Dedekind domain R whose ideal class group is isomorphic to G. Later, C.R. Leedham-Green showed that such an R may constructed as the integral closure of a PID in a quadratic field extension (Leedham-Green 1972). In 1976, M. Rosen showed how to realize any countable abelian group as the class group of a Dedekind domain which is a subring of the rational function field of an elliptic curve, and conjectured that such an "elliptic" construction should be possible for a general abelian group (Rosen 1976). Rosen's conjecture was proven in 2008 by P.L. Clark (Clark 2008). In contrast, one of the basic theorems in algebraic number theory asserts that the class group of the ring of integers of a number field is finite; its cardinality is called the class number and it is an important and rather mysterious invariant, notwithstanding the hard work of many leading mathematicians from Gauss to the present day. [edit] Finitely generated modules over a Dedekind domainIn view of the well known and exceedingly useful structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain (PID), it is natural to ask for a corresponding theory for finitely generated modules over a Dedekind domain. Let us briefly recall the structure theory in the case of a finitely generated module M over a PID R. We define the torsion submodule T to be the set of elements m of M such that rm = 0 for some nonzero r in R. Then: (M1) T can be decomposed into a direct sum of cyclic torsion modules, each of the form R / I for some nonzero ideal I of R. By the Chinese Remainder Theorem, each R / I can further be decomposed into a direct sum of submodules of the form R / Pi, where Pi is a power of a prime ideal. This decomposition need not be unique, but any two decompositions differ only in the order of the factors. (M2) The torsion submodule is a direct summand: i.e., there exists a complementary submodule P of M such that (M3PID) P isomorphic to Rn for a uniquely determined non-negative integer n. In particular, P a finitely generated free module. Now let M be a finitely generated module over an arbitrary Dedekind domain R. Then (M1) and (M2) hold verbatim. However, it follows from (M3PID) that a finitely generated torsionfree module P over a PID is free. In particular, it asserts that all fractional ideals are principal, a statement which is false whenever R is not a PID. In other words, the nontriviality of the class group Cl(R) causes (M3PID) to fail. Remarkably, the additional structure in torsionfree modules over an arbitrary Dedekind domain is precisely controlled by the class group, as we now explain. Over an arbitrary Dedekind domain one has (M3DD) P is isomorphic to a direct sum of rank one projective modules: if and only if
and Rank one projective modules can be identified with fractional ideals, and the last condition can be rephrased as Thus a finitely generated torsionfree module of rank n > 0 can be expressed as Theorem: Let R be a Dedekind domain. Then These results were established by E. Steinitz in 1912. [edit] Locally Dedekind ringsThere exist integral domains R which are locally but not globally Dedekind: the localization of R at each maximal ideal is a Dedekind ring (equivalently, a DVR) but R itself is not Dedekind. As mentioned above, such a ring cannot be Noetherian. It seems that the first examples of such rings were constructed by N. Nakano in 1953. In the literature such rings are sometimes called "proper almost Dedekind rings." [edit] References
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