Math 8211: Lecture Outlines

o12/12/03: Normal Noetherian integral domains are intersections of DVRs. Geometric interpretation. [E: Section 11.2]

o12/10/03: Groebner bases (presentation by Hazem Hamdan). [http://www.math.umn.edu/~hamdan/grobnerpres.pdf; E: Chapter 15]

o12/08/03: Monomial ideals (presentation by Hyeung-joon Kim). [E: Section 15.1 and J. Eagon and M. Hochster, R-sequences and indeterminates. Quarterly J. of Math. 25 (1974), 61-71]

o12/05/03: Noetherian valuation rings are DVRs. Examples of general valuation rings. [E: Exercises 11.3-4; AM: Exercise 9.3, the beginning of Section "Valuation rings" from Chapter 5]

o12/03/03: A proof of the main theorem on DVRs (a Noetherian, normal integral domain A with Spec A = {0, m}). General valuation rings. [E: Section 11.2 through the proof of Theorem 11.2, Exercises 11.1-2; AM: Section "Discrete valuation rings" from Chapter 9, Exercise 9.4, the beginning of Section "Valuation rings" from Chapter 5]

o12/01/03: Properties of discrete valuation rings (DVRs). A criterion for a DVR (a local Noetherian integral domain with a principle maximal ideal). The main theorem on DVRs (a Noetherian, normal integral domain A with Spec A = {0, m}; no proof yet). [E: Section 11.2 before the proof of Theorem 11.2; AM: Chapter 9 before the proof of Proposition 9.2]

o11/26/03: Localization and primary ideals. The second uniqueness theorem. Discrete valuation rings (DVRs): definitions. [E: Section 3.3, especially Theorem 3.10.d and its proof, Section 11.1; AM: Chapter 4 (after Theorem 4.5 through the end) and Chapter 9 through the beginning of Section "Discrete valuation rings"]

o11/24/03: The cone example. Noether's theorem on the existence of primary decomposition. Primary decomposition of I and Ass(A/I): the first uniqueness theorem. [E: Section 3.3, especially Theorem 3.10 and its proof; AM: Chapter 4 (through Theorem 4.5) and Section "Primary decomposition in Noetherian rings" from Chapter 7]

o11/21/03: Primary decomposition. Shortest primary decomposition. Geometric interpretation in general. Primary decompositions for I = (X^2, XY): geometric interpretation and nonuniqueness. [E: Section 3.3, especially Corollary 3.8 and Theorem 3.10 (no proof yet), Sections 3.7 and 3.8; AM: Chapter 4 (through the definition of primary decomposition, Example after Theorem 4.5 and Remarks after Proposition 4.6)]

o11/19/03: P-primary ideals. P-primary ideals and powers of P. If the radical of Q is maximal, then Q is primary. Example of (X^2, XY) in k[X,Y]. Primary ideals and Ass. [E: beginning of Section 3.3; AM: beginning of Chapter 4 (through Proposition 4.2)]

o11/17/03: Relation between of Ass M and Supp M. Decomposition of Supp M as the union of irreducible closed sets corresponding to the minimal primes containing Ann M; these minimal primes are also in Ass M. Disassembling a module. Primary ideals. [E: Section 3.1, Section 3.2, especially Proposition 3.7, beginning of Section 3.3; AM: beginning of Chapter 4 (through Example 1)]

o11/14/03: The zerodivisors and Ass M. Ass M and union Ass L and Ass M/L. Relation between of Ass M and Supp M. Geometric interpretation. [E: Section 3.1; AM: Remark after Proposition 4.6; Matsumura, Commutative Ring Theory: Theorems 6.1 and 6.5 and a remark after it]

o11/12/03: Geometric interpretation of Supp M. Associated primes and the assassin Ass M. Properties of Ass M. [E: p. 67, Section 3.1, Proposition 3.4, Lemma 3.6; AM: Proposition 4.6]

o11/10/03: Homework discussion: Problem 8. Towards primary decomposition: Supp M and Ann M. [E: Lemma 13.2.c, p. 67; AM: Exercises 5.16 and 3.19]

o11/07/03: Homework discussion: Problems 15, 4, and 8. [E: pp. 35-36, Lemma 13.2.c; AM: Exercise 1.28, Remark after Theorem 7.5, Exercise 5.16]

o11/05/03: Localization commutes with taking quotients. Iterated localization. Examples. The idea of primary decomposition. [E: Introduction to Chapter 3; AM: Exercise 3.4, the first two paragraphs of Chapter 4]

o11/03/03: Problem #7 (presented by Wenliang Zhang). Modules of fractions. Exactness of S^{-1}. [E: Section 2.1, Proposition 2.5, Corollary 2.6, Exercises 2.1, 2.8, 2.9; AM: Proposition 3.3 and Corollary 3.4 in Chapter 3]

o10/31/03: Restriction and extension of ideals. Ideals in A and S^{-1} A. The description of Spec S^{-1} A as a subset of Spec A. Localization at a prime ideal. Examples: Z_(p) and localization of the ring of polynomials as germs of rational functions defined near V(P), regular at a generic point of V(P). [E: Introduction to Chapter 2, Section 2.1, Exercise 2.3; AM: Section "Extending and contracting ideals in rings of fractions" and Examples after Corollary 3.2 in Chapter 3]

o10/29/03: Rings of fractions S^{-1} A and their properties. [E: Section 2.1 through top of p. 61, Exercises 2.2, 2.7; AM: Chapter 3 through Corollary 3.2]

o10/27/03: Varieties versus Spec A: summary. [E: Section 1.6]

o10/24/03: Decomposition of a variety into finitely many irreducibles. The Zariski topology on Spec A. An "easy strong Nullstellensatz": I(V(J)) = rad J for Spec A. Spec A for a Noetherian ring. [E: Subsection 2 on p .88, Section 3.8, Corollary 2.12, Exercise 1.24; AM: Proposition 1.14, Exercises 1.15-16, 1.18-20, 6.7-9]

o10/22/03: The Nullstellensatz and Spec A. The Zariski topology on k^n and a variety. The Zariski topology is Noetherian. [E: p. 32-34, Subsection 2 on p. 88; AM: Exercises 6.5 and 6.8]

o10/20/03: A proof of the Nullstellensatz. Irreducible varieties and prime ideals. [E: p. 32, Subsection 2 on p. 88; AM: Exercises 7.14 and 1.19]

o10/17/03: Affine varieties. Maximal ideals of a finitely generated algebra over an algebraically closed field and points of the corresponding variety. The case of an algebraically nonclosed field. The Nullstellensatz (no proof yet). Comparison to the "easy" Nullstellensatz: rad J = the intersection of primes containing J. [E: Sections 1.6, 4.5 (Corollary 1.9 and Theorem 1.6), and 13.2; AM: Exercises 1.27 and 7.14]

o10/15/03: Field extensions. The weak Nullstellensatz. Maximal ideals of k[X_1,...,X_n]. Maximal ideals of k[X_1,...,X_n] and points of k^n when k is algebraically closed. [E: Section 13.2 (Corollary 13.12.i only); AM: Proposition 5.23, Corollary 5.24, Exercises 5.17-19, Proposition 7.9, and Corollary 7.10]

o10/13/03: Proof of the Noether normalization lemma, continued (proof of Main Claim). Geometric interpretation: example of the hyperbola XY = 1. [E: Section 13.1 (Lemma 13.2 and Theorem 13.3); AM: Exercise 5.16]

o10/10/03: Review of Problem Set 1: Problem 4.27 from [E] (presented by Wenliang Zhang). Noether normalization. [E: Section 13.1 (mainly Theorem 13.3); AM: Exercise 5.16]

o10/08/03: Review of Problem Set 1. Proposition 4.11 from [E]: if the coefficients of the product of two monic polynomials are integral, then the coefficients of each are integral. [E: Proposition 4.11; AM: Exercise 5.8]

o10/06/03: Integral closure, integrally closed rings, normal domains, normalization, the ring of integers of a number field. Examples. Normalization and desingularization: preview. [E: pp. 117-123, Section 4.2 (Propositions 4.10 and 4.11, Corollary 4.12), Section 4.3; AM: Definition of an integrally closed domain (which we called a normal domain) from Section "Integrally closed domains" in Chapter 5]

o10/03/03: Integral elements, integral extensions, and finite algebras. Examples. Tower Laws. [E: pp. 117-119, Section 4.1 (Corollaries 4.5 and 4.6); AM: Section "Integral dependence" from Chapter 5]

o10/01/03: The Hilbert Basis Theorem. Algebraic and integral dependence. Algebras over rings, extension rings. [E: Section 1.4, Introduction to Chapter 4, p. 13; AM: the first section of Chapter 7, the first page of Chapter 5, Section "Algebras" from Chapter 2]

o09/29/03: The ring of germs of continuous functions, continued. Noetherian modules. Exact sequences. Modules over Noetherian rings. [E: pp. 16-17, 28, Proposition 1.4, Exercises 1.1, 1.3; AM: Section "Exact sequences" from Chapter 2, Chapter 6 through Proposition 6.6]

o09/26/03: The ascending chain condition (ACC). Noetherian rings. Examples of non-Noetherian rings. The ring of germs of continuous functions. [E: p. 27; AM: Propositions 6.1, 7.1, and 7.2]

o09/24/03: The Cayley-Hamilton Theorem. A generalization and corollaries. Nakayama's Lemma. [E: Section 4.1 (Theorem 4.3, Corollaries 4.4, 4.7, 4.8, and Warning); AM: Section "Finitely generated modules" from Chapter 2]

o09/22/03: Modules. Generators of modules. Free modules. Examples. [E: Section 0.3; AM: Chapter 2 through the beginning of Section "Finitely generated modules"]

o09/15/03: Local rings. Examples. Power series rings. [E: Introduction to Chapter 2; AM: Chapter 1, the end of Section "Prime ideals and maximal ideals", Exercise 5]

o09/10/03: Zorn's Lemma. The existence of maximal and prime ideals. Nilpotents and nilradical. The radical of an ideal. [E: Section 2.3, p. 33; AM: Chapter 1, Sections "Prime ideals and maximal ideals", "Nilradical and the Jacobson radical", and the "radical" part of "Operations on ideals"]

o09/08/03: The description of Spec k[X,Y] and Spec Z[X]. Geometric interpretation. [E: Section 1.6; AM: Exercise 16 in Chapter 1]

o09/05/03: Spec A. Examples, Spec k[X,Y] and Spec Z[X]. [E: pp. 54-55; AM: Exercise 16 in Chapter 1]

o09/03/03: Introduction. Ideals, prime and maximal ideals. [E: 1.1, 1.2, 0.1; AM: Chapter 1 through the beginning of section "Prime ideals and maximal ideals"]


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Last modified: Fri Aug 29 12:45:08 CDT 2003