Nakayama's lemma - Wikipedia
- ️Fri Sep 09 2022
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, more specifically abstract algebra and commutative algebra, Nakayama's lemma — also known as the Krull–Azumaya theorem[1] — governs the interaction between the Jacobson radical of a ring (typically a commutative ring) and its finitely generated modules. Informally, the lemma immediately gives a precise sense in which finitely generated modules over a commutative ring behave like vector spaces over a field. It is an important tool in algebraic geometry, because it allows local data on algebraic varieties, in the form of modules over local rings, to be studied pointwise as vector spaces over the residue field of the ring.
The lemma is named after the Japanese mathematician Tadashi Nakayama and introduced in its present form in Nakayama (1951), although it was first discovered in the special case of ideals in a commutative ring by Wolfgang Krull and then in general by Goro Azumaya (1951).[2] In the commutative case, the lemma is a simple consequence of a generalized form of the Cayley–Hamilton theorem, an observation made by Michael Atiyah (1969). The special case of the noncommutative version of the lemma for right ideals appears in Nathan Jacobson (1945), and so the noncommutative Nakayama lemma is sometimes known as the Jacobson–Azumaya theorem.[1] The latter has various applications in the theory of Jacobson radicals.[3]
Let be a commutative ring with identity 1. The following is Nakayama's lemma, as stated in Matsumura (1989):
Statement 1: Let be an ideal in
, and
a finitely generated module over
. If
, then there exists
with
such that
.
This is proven below. A useful mnemonic for Nakayama's lemma is "". This summarizes the following alternative formulation:
Statement 2: Let be an ideal in
, and
a finitely generated module over
. If
, then there exists an
such that
for all
.
- Proof: Take
in Statement 1.
The following corollary is also known as Nakayama's lemma, and it is in this form that it most often appears.[4]
Statement 3: If is a finitely generated module over
,
is the Jacobson radical of
, and
, then
.
- Proof:
(with
as in Statement 1) is in the Jacobson radical so
is invertible.
More generally, one has that is a superfluous submodule of
when
is finitely generated.
Statement 4: If is a finitely generated module over
,
is a submodule of
, and
=
, then
=
.
- Proof: Apply Statement 3 to
.
The following result manifests Nakayama's lemma in terms of generators.[5]
Statement 5: If is a finitely generated module over
and the images of elements
1,...,
of
in
generate
as an
-module, then
1,...,
also generate
as an
-module.
- Proof: Apply Statement 4 to
.
If one assumes instead that is complete and
is separated with respect to the
-adic topology for an ideal
in
, this last statement holds with
in place of
and without assuming in advance that
is finitely generated.[6] Here separatedness means that the
-adic topology satisfies the T1 separation axiom, and is equivalent to
In the special case of a finitely generated module over a local ring
with maximal ideal
, the quotient
is a vector space over the field
. Statement 5 then implies that a basis of
lifts to a minimal set of generators of
. Conversely, every minimal set of generators of
is obtained in this way, and any two such sets of generators are related by an invertible matrix with entries in the ring.
Geometric interpretation
[edit]
In this form, Nakayama's lemma takes on concrete geometrical significance. Local rings arise in geometry as the germs of functions at a point. Finitely generated modules over local rings arise quite often as germs of sections of vector bundles. Working at the level of germs rather than points, the notion of finite-dimensional vector bundle gives way to that of a coherent sheaf. Informally, Nakayama's lemma says that one can still regard a coherent sheaf as coming from a vector bundle in some sense. More precisely, let be a coherent sheaf of
-modules over an arbitrary scheme
. The stalk of
at a point
, denoted by
, is a module over the local ring
and the fiber of
at
is the vector space
. Nakayama's lemma implies that a basis of the fiber
lifts to a minimal set of generators of
. That is:
- Any basis of the fiber of a coherent sheaf
at a point comes from a minimal basis of local sections.
Reformulating this geometrically, if is a locally free
-module representing a vector bundle
, and if we take a basis of the vector bundle at a point in the scheme
, this basis can be lifted to a basis of sections of the vector bundle in some neighborhood of the point. We can organize this data diagrammatically
where is an n-dimensional vector space, to say a basis in
(which is a basis of sections of the bundle
) can be lifted to a basis of sections
for some neighborhood
of
.
Going up and going down
[edit]
The going up theorem is essentially a corollary of Nakayama's lemma.[7] It asserts:
Module epimorphisms
[edit]
Nakayama's lemma makes precise one sense in which finitely generated modules over a commutative ring are like vector spaces over a field. The following consequence of Nakayama's lemma gives another way in which this is true:
Over a local ring, one can say more about module epimorphisms:[9]
Homological versions
[edit]
Nakayama's lemma also has several versions in homological algebra. The above statement about epimorphisms can be used to show:[9]
A geometrical and global counterpart to this is the Serre–Swan theorem, relating projective modules and coherent sheaves.
More generally, one has[10]
- Here
is the residue field of
and
is the tor functor.
Inverse function theorem
[edit]
Nakayama's lemma is used to prove a version of the inverse function theorem in algebraic geometry:
A standard proof of the Nakayama lemma uses the following technique due to Atiyah & Macdonald (1969).[12]
- Let M be an R-module generated by n elements, and φ: M → M an R-linear map. If there is an ideal I of R such that φ(M) ⊂ IM, then there is a monic polynomial
- with pk ∈ Ik, such that
- as an endomorphism of M.
This assertion is precisely a generalized version of the Cayley–Hamilton theorem, and the proof proceeds along the same lines. On the generators xi of M, one has a relation of the form
where aij ∈ I. Thus
The required result follows by multiplying by the adjugate of the matrix (φδij − aij) and invoking Cramer's rule. One finds then det(φδij − aij) = 0, so the required polynomial is
To prove Nakayama's lemma from the Cayley–Hamilton theorem, assume that IM = M and take φ to be the identity on M. Then define a polynomial p(x) as above. Then
has the required property: and
.
Noncommutative case
[edit]
A version of the lemma holds for right modules over non-commutative unital rings R. The resulting theorem is sometimes known as the Jacobson–Azumaya theorem.[13]
Let J(R) be the Jacobson radical of R. If U is a right module over a ring, R, and I is a right ideal in R, then define U·I to be the set of all (finite) sums of elements of the form u·i, where · is simply the action of R on U. Necessarily, U·I is a submodule of U.
If V is a maximal submodule of U, then U/V is simple. So U·J(R) is necessarily a subset of V, by the definition of J(R) and the fact that U/V is simple.[14] Thus, if U contains at least one (proper) maximal submodule, U·J(R) is a proper submodule of U. However, this need not hold for arbitrary modules U over R, for U need not contain any maximal submodules.[15] Naturally, if U is a Noetherian module, this holds. If R is Noetherian, and U is finitely generated, then U is a Noetherian module over R, and the conclusion is satisfied.[16] Somewhat remarkable is that the weaker assumption, namely that U is finitely generated as an R-module (and no finiteness assumption on R), is sufficient to guarantee the conclusion. This is essentially the statement of Nakayama's lemma.[17]
Precisely, one has:
- Nakayama's lemma: Let U be a finitely generated right module over a (unital) ring R. If U is a non-zero module, then U·J(R) is a proper submodule of U.[17]
Let be a finite subset of
, minimal with respect to the property that it generates
. Since
is non-zero, this set
is nonempty. Denote every element of
by
for
. Since
generates
,
.
Suppose , to obtain a contradiction. Then every element
can be expressed as a finite combination
for some
.
Each can be further decomposed as
for some
. Therefore, we have
.
Since is a (two-sided) ideal in
, we have
for every
, and thus this becomes
for some
,
.
Putting and applying distributivity, we obtain
.
Choose some . If the right ideal
were proper, then it would be contained in a maximal right ideal
and both
and
would belong to
, leading to a contradiction (note that
by the definition of the Jacobson radical). Thus
and
has a right inverse
in
. We have
.
Therefore,
.
Thus is a linear combination of the elements from
. This contradicts the minimality of
and establishes the result.[18]
There is also a graded version of Nakayama's lemma. Let R be a ring that is graded by the ordered semigroup of non-negative integers, and let denote the ideal generated by positively graded elements. Then if M is a graded module over R for which
for i sufficiently negative (in particular, if M is finitely generated and R does not contain elements of negative degree) such that
, then
. Of particular importance is the case that R is a polynomial ring with the standard grading, and M is a finitely generated module.
The proof is much easier than in the ungraded case: taking i to be the least integer such that , we see that
does not appear in
, so either
, or such an i does not exist, i.e.,
.
- ^ a b Nagata 1975, §A.2
- ^ Nagata 1975, §A.2; Matsumura 1989, p. 8
- ^ Isaacs 1993, Corollary 13.13, p. 184
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, Corollary 4.8; Atiyah & Macdonald (1969, Proposition 2.6)
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, Corollary 4.8(b)
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, Exercise 7.2
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, §4.4
- ^ Matsumura 1989, Theorem 2.4
- ^ a b Griffiths & Harris 1994, p. 681
- ^ Eisenbud 1995, Corollary 19.5
- ^ McKernan, James. "The Inverse Function Theorem" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-09-09.
- ^ Matsumura 1989, p. 7: "A standard technique applicable to finite A-modules is the 'determinant trick'..." See also the proof contained in Eisenbud (1995, §4.1).
- ^ Nagata 1975, §A2
- ^ Isaacs 1993, p. 182
- ^ Isaacs 1993, p. 183
- ^ Isaacs 1993, Theorem 12.19, p. 172
- ^ a b Isaacs 1993, Theorem 13.11, p. 183
- ^ Isaacs 1993, Theorem 13.11, p. 183; Isaacs 1993, Corollary 13.12, p. 183
- Atiyah, Michael F.; Macdonald, Ian G. (1969), Introduction to Commutative Algebra, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
- Azumaya, Gorô (1951), "On maximally central algebras", Nagoya Mathematical Journal, 2: 119–150, doi:10.1017/s0027763000010114, ISSN 0027-7630, MR 0040287.
- Eisenbud, David (1995), Commutative algebra, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 150, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-5350-1, ISBN 978-0-387-94268-1, MR 1322960
- Griffiths, Phillip; Harris, Joseph (1994), Principles of algebraic geometry, Wiley Classics Library, New York: John Wiley & Sons, doi:10.1002/9781118032527, ISBN 978-0-471-05059-9, MR 1288523
- Hartshorne, Robin (1977), Algebraic Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 52, Springer-Verlag.
- Isaacs, I. Martin (1993), Algebra, a graduate course (1st ed.), Brooks/Cole Publishing Company, ISBN 0-534-19002-2
- Jacobson, Nathan (1945), "The radical and semi-simplicity for arbitrary rings", American Journal of Mathematics, 67 (2): 300–320, doi:10.2307/2371731, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2371731, MR 0012271.
- Matsumura, Hideyuki (1989), Commutative ring theory, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 8 (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-36764-6, MR 1011461.
- Nagata, Masayoshi (1975), Local rings, Robert E. Krieger Publishing Co., Huntington, N.Y., ISBN 978-0-88275-228-0, MR 0460307.
- Nakayama, Tadasi (1951), "A remark on finitely generated modules", Nagoya Mathematical Journal, 3: 139–140, doi:10.1017/s0027763000012265, ISSN 0027-7630, MR 0043770.