In commutative algebra and algebraic geometry, localization is a formal way to introduce the "denominators" to a given ring or module. That is, it introduces a new ring/module out of an existing ring/module R, so that it consists of fractions such that the denominator s belongs to a given subset S of R. If S is the set of the non-zero elements of an integral domain, then the localization is the field of fractions: this case generalizes the construction of the field of rational numbers from the ring of integers.
The technique has become fundamental, particularly in algebraic geometry, as it provides a natural link to sheaf theory. In fact, the term localization originated in algebraic geometry: if R is a ring of functions defined on some geometric object (algebraic variety) V, and one wants to study this variety "locally" near a point p, then one considers the set S of all functions that are not zero at p and localizes R with respect to S. The resulting ring contains information about the behavior of V near p, and excludes information that is not "local", such as the zeros of functions that are outside V (c.f. the example given at local ring).
Localization of a ring
editThe localization of a commutative ring R by a multiplicatively closed set S is a new ring whose elements are fractions with numerators in R and denominators in S.
If the ring is an integral domain the construction generalizes and follows closely that of the field of fractions, and, in particular, that of the rational numbers as the field of fractions of the integers. For rings that have zero divisors, the construction is similar but requires more care.
Multiplicative set
editLocalization is commonly done with respect to a multiplicatively closed set S (also called a multiplicative set or a multiplicative system) of elements of a ring R, that is a subset of R that is closed under multiplication, and contains 1.
The requirement that S must be a multiplicative set is natural, since it implies that all denominators introduced by the localization belong to S. The localization by a set U that is not multiplicatively closed can also be defined, by taking as possible denominators all products of elements of U. However, the same localization is obtained by using the multiplicatively closed set S of all products of elements of U. As this often makes reasoning and notation simpler, it is standard practice to consider only localizations by multiplicative sets.
For example, the localization by a single element s introduces fractions of the form but also products of such fractions, such as So, the denominators will belong to the multiplicative set of the powers of s. Therefore, one generally talks of "the localization by the powers of an element" rather than of "the localization by an element".
The localization of a ring R by a multiplicative set S is generally denoted but other notations are commonly used in some special cases: if consists of the powers of a single element, is often denoted if is the complement of a prime ideal , then is denoted
In the remainder of this article, only localizations by a multiplicative set are considered.
Integral domains
editWhen the ring R is an integral domain and S does not contain 0, the ring is a subring of the field of fractions of R. As such, the localization of a domain is a domain.
More precisely, it is the subring of the field of fractions of R, that consists of the fractions such that This is a subring since the sum and the product of two elements of are in This results from the defining property of a multiplicative set, which implies also that In this case, R is a subring of It is shown below that this is no longer true in general, typically when S contains zero divisors.
For example, the decimal fractions are the localization of the ring of integers by the multiplicative set of the powers of ten. In this case, consists of the rational numbers that can be written as where n is an integer, and k is a nonnegative integer.
General construction
editIn the general case, a problem arises with zero divisors. Let S be a multiplicative set in a commutative ring R. Suppose that and is a zero divisor with Then is the image in of and one has Thus some nonzero elements of R must be zero in The construction that follows is designed for taking this into account.
Given R and S as above, one considers the equivalence relation on that is defined by if there exists a such that
The localization is defined as the set of the equivalence classes for this relation. The class of (r, s) is denoted as or So, one has if and only if there is a such that The reason for the is to handle cases such as the above where is nonzero even though the fractions should be regarded as equal.
The localization is a commutative ring with addition
multiplication
additive identity and multiplicative identity
The function
defines a ring homomorphism from into which is injective if and only if S does not contain any zero divisors.
If then is the zero ring that has 0 as unique element.
If S is the set of all regular elements of R (that is the elements that are not zero divisors), is called the total ring of fractions of R.
Universal property
editThe (above defined) ring homomorphism satisfies a universal property that is described below. This characterizes up to an isomorphism. So all properties of localizations can be deduced from the universal property, independently from the way they have been constructed. Moreover, many important properties of localization are easily deduced from the general properties of universal properties, while their direct proof may be more technical.
The universal property satisfied by is the following:
- If is a ring homomorphism that maps every element of S to a unit (invertible element) in T, there exists a unique ring homomorphism such that
Using category theory, this can be expressed by saying that localization is a functor that is left adjoint to a forgetful functor. More precisely, let and be the categories whose objects are pairs of a commutative ring and a submonoid of, respectively, the multiplicative monoid or the group of units of the ring. The morphisms of these categories are the ring homomorphisms that map the submonoid of the first object into the submonoid of the second one. Finally, let be the forgetful functor that forgets that the elements of the second element of the pair are invertible.
Then the factorization of the universal property defines a bijection
This may seem a rather tricky way of expressing the universal property, but it is useful for showing easily many properties, by using the fact that the composition of two left adjoint functors is a left adjoint functor.
Examples
edit- If is the ring of integers, and then is the field of the rational numbers.
- If R is an integral domain, and then is the field of fractions of R. The preceding example is a special case of this one.
- If R is a commutative ring, and if S is the subset of its elements that are not zero divisors, then is the total ring of fractions of R. In this case, S is the largest multiplicative set such that the homomorphism is injective. The preceding example is a special case of this one.
- If is an element of a commutative ring R and then can be identified (is canonically isomorphic to) (The proof consists of showing that this ring satisfies the above universal property.) This sort of localization plays a fundamental role in the definition of an affine scheme.
- If is a prime ideal of a commutative ring R, the set complement of in R is a multiplicative set (by the definition of a prime ideal). The ring is a local ring that is generally denoted and called the local ring of R at This sort of localization is fundamental in commutative algebra, because many properties of a commutative ring can be read on its local rings. Such a property is often called a local property. For example, a ring is regular if and only if all its local rings are regular.
Ring properties
editLocalization is a rich construction that has many useful properties. In this section, only the properties relative to rings and to a single localization are considered. Properties concerning ideals, modules, or several multiplicative sets are considered in other sections.
- if and only if S contains 0.
- The ring homomorphism is injective if and only if S does not contain any zero divisors.
- The ring homomorphism is an epimorphism in the category of rings, that is not surjective in general.
- The ring is a flat R-module (see § Localization of a module for details).
- If is the complement of a prime ideal , then denoted is a local ring; that is, it has only one maximal ideal.
Properties to be moved in another section
- Localization commutes with formations of finite sums, products, intersections and radicals;[1] e.g., if denote the radical of an ideal I in R, then
- Let R be an integral domain with the field of fractions K. Then its localization at a prime ideal can be viewed as a subring of K. Moreover,
- where the first intersection is over all prime ideals and the second over the maximal ideals.[3]
- There is a bijection between the set of prime ideals of S−1R and the set of prime ideals of R that do not intersect S. This bijection is induced by the given homomorphism R → S −1R.
Saturation of a multiplicative set
editLet be a multiplicative set. The saturation of is the set
The multiplicative set S is saturated if it equals its saturation, that is, if , or equivalently, if implies that r and s are in S.
If S is not saturated, and then is a multiplicative inverse of the image of r in So, the images of the elements of are all invertible in and the universal property implies that and are canonically isomorphic, that is, there is a unique isomorphism between them that fixes the images of the elements of R.
If S and T are two multiplicative sets, then and are isomorphic if and only if they have the same saturation, or, equivalently, if s belongs to one of the multiplicative sets, then there exists such that st belongs to the other.
Saturated multiplicative sets are not widely used explicitly, since, for verifying that a set is saturated, one must know all units of the ring.
Terminology explained by the context
editThe term localization originates in the general trend of modern mathematics to study geometrical and topological objects locally, that is in terms of their behavior near each point. Examples of this trend are the fundamental concepts of manifolds, germs and sheafs. In algebraic geometry, an affine algebraic set can be identified with a quotient ring of a polynomial ring in such a way that the points of the algebraic set correspond to the maximal ideals of the ring (this is Hilbert's Nullstellensatz). This correspondence has been generalized for making the set of the prime ideals of a commutative ring a topological space equipped with the Zariski topology; this topological space is called the spectrum of the ring.
In this context, a localization by a multiplicative set may be viewed as the restriction of the spectrum of a ring to the subspace of the prime ideals (viewed as points) that do not intersect the multiplicative set.
Two classes of localizations are more commonly considered:
- The multiplicative set is the complement of a prime ideal of a ring R. In this case, one speaks of the "localization at ", or "localization at a point". The resulting ring, denoted is a local ring, and is the algebraic analog of a ring of germs.
- The multiplicative set consists of all powers of an element t of a ring R. The resulting ring is commonly denoted and its spectrum is the Zariski open set of the prime ideals that do not contain t. Thus the localization is the analog of the restriction of a topological space to a neighborhood of a point (every prime ideal has a neighborhood basis consisting of Zariski open sets of this form).
In number theory and algebraic topology, when working over the ring of integers, one refers to a property relative to an integer n as a property true at n or away from n, depending on the localization that is considered. "Away from n" means that the property is considered after localization by the powers of n, and, if p is a prime number, "at p" means that the property is considered after localization at the prime ideal . This terminology can be explained by the fact that, if p is prime, the nonzero prime ideals of the localization of are either the singleton set {p} or its complement in the set of prime numbers.
Localization and saturation of ideals
editLet S be a multiplicative set in a commutative ring R, and be the canonical ring homomorphism. Given an ideal I in R, let the set of the fractions in whose numerator is in I. This is an ideal of which is generated by j(I), and called the localization of I by S.
The saturation of I by S is it is an ideal of R, which can also defined as the set of the elements such that there exists with
Many properties of ideals are either preserved by saturation and localization, or can be characterized by simpler properties of localization and saturation. In what follows, S is a multiplicative set in a ring R, and I and J are ideals of R; the saturation of an ideal I by a multiplicative set S is denoted or, when the multiplicative set S is clear from the context,
-
(this is not always true for strict inclusions) - If is a prime ideal such that then is a prime ideal and ; if the intersection is nonempty, then and
Localization of a module
editLet R be a commutative ring, S be a multiplicative set in R, and M be an R-module. The localization of the module M by S, denoted S−1M, is an S−1R-module that is constructed exactly as the localization of R, except that the numerators of the fractions belong to M. That is, as a set, it consists of equivalence classes, denoted , of pairs (m, s), where and and two pairs (m, s) and (n, t) are equivalent if there is an element u in S such that
Addition and scalar multiplication are defined as for usual fractions (in the following formula, and ):
Moreover, S−1M is also an R-module with scalar multiplication
It is straightforward to check that these operations are well-defined, that is, they give the same result for different choices of representatives of fractions.
The localization of a module can be equivalently defined by using tensor products:
The proof of equivalence (up to a canonical isomorphism) can be done by showing that the two definitions satisfy the same universal property.
Module properties
editIf M is a submodule of an R-module N, and S is a multiplicative set in R, one has This implies that, if is an injective module homomorphism, then
is also an injective homomorphism.
Since the tensor product is a right exact functor, this implies that localization by S maps exact sequences of R-modules to exact sequences of -modules. In other words, localization is an exact functor, and is a flat R-module.
This flatness and the fact that localization solves a universal property make that localization preserves many properties of modules and rings, and is compatible with solutions of other universal properties. For example, the natural map
is an isomorphism. If is a finitely presented module, the natural map
is also an isomorphism.[4]
If a module M is a finitely generated over R, one has
where denotes annihilator, that is the ideal of the elements of the ring that map to zero all elements of the module.[5] In particular,
that is, if for some [6]
Localization at primes
editThe definition of a prime ideal implies immediately that the complement of a prime ideal in a commutative ring R is a multiplicative set. In this case, the localization is commonly denoted The ring is a local ring, that is called the local ring of R at This means that is the unique maximal ideal of the ring
Such localizations are fundamental for commutative algebra and algebraic geometry for several reasons. One is that local rings are often easier to study than general commutative rings, in particular because of Nakayama lemma. However, the main reason is that many properties are true for a ring if and only if they are true for all its local rings. For example, a ring is regular if and only if all its local rings are regular local rings.
Properties of a ring that can be characterized on its local rings are called local properties, and are often the algebraic counterpart of geometric local properties of algebraic varieties, which are properties that can be studied by restriction to a small neighborhood of each point of the variety. (There is another concept of local property that refers to localization to Zariski open sets; see § Localization to Zariski open sets, below.)
Many local properties are a consequence of the fact that the module
is a faithfully flat module when the direct sum is taken over all prime ideals (or over all maximal ideals of R). See also Faithfully flat descent.
Examples of local properties
editA property P of an R-module M is a local property if the following conditions are equivalent:
- P holds for M.
- P holds for all where is a prime ideal of R.
- P holds for all where is a maximal ideal of R.
The following are local properties:
- M is zero.
- M is torsion-free (in the case where R is a commutative domain).
- M is a flat module.
- M is an invertible module (in the case where R is a commutative domain, and M is a submodule of the field of fractions of R).
- is injective (resp. surjective), where N is another R-module.
On the other hand, some properties are not local properties. For example, an infinite direct product of fields is not an integral domain nor a Noetherian ring, while all its local rings are fields, and therefore Noetherian integral domains.
Non-commutative case
editLocalizing non-commutative rings is more difficult. While the localization exists for every set S of prospective units, it might take a different form to the one described above. One condition which ensures that the localization is well behaved is the Ore condition.
One case for non-commutative rings where localization has a clear interest is for rings of differential operators. It has the interpretation, for example, of adjoining a formal inverse D−1 for a differentiation operator D. This is done in many contexts in methods for differential equations. There is now a large mathematical theory about it, named microlocalization, connecting with numerous other branches. The micro- tag is to do with connections with Fourier theory, in particular.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Atiyah & Macdonald 1969, Proposition 3.11. (v).
- ^ Borel, AG. 3.3
- ^ Matsumura, Theorem 4.7
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, Proposition 2.10
- ^ Atiyah & Macdonald 1969, Proposition 3.14.
- ^ Borel, AG. 3.1
- Atiyah, Michael Francis; Macdonald, I.G. (1969). Introduction to Commutative Algebra. Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-201-40751-8.
- Borel, Armand. Linear Algebraic Groups (2nd ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-97370-2.
- Cohn, P. M. (1989). "§ 9.3". Algebra. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. pp. xvi+428. ISBN 0-471-92234-X. MR 1006872.
- Cohn, P. M. (1991). "§ 9.1". Algebra. Vol. 3 (2nd ed.). Chichester: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. pp. xii+474. ISBN 0-471-92840-2. MR 1098018.
- Eisenbud, David (1995), Commutative algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 150, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-94268-1, MR 1322960
- Matsumura. Commutative Algebra. Benjamin-Cummings
- Stenström, Bo (1971). Rings and modules of quotients. Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 237. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. pp. vii+136. ISBN 978-3-540-05690-4. MR 0325663.
- Serge Lang, "Algebraic Number Theory," Springer, 2000. pages 3–4.
External links
edit- Localization from MathWorld.