Noetherian ring

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In algebra, a Noetherian ring is a ring with a condition on the lattice of ideals.

Contents

Definition

Let A be a ring. The following conditions are equivalent:

  1. The ring A satisfies an ascending chain condition on the set of its ideals: that is, there is no infinite ascending chain of ideals I_0\subsetneq I_1\subsetneq I_2\subsetneq\ldots.
  2. Every ideal of A is finitely generated.
  3. Every nonempty set of ideals of A has a maximal element when considered as a partially ordered set with respect to inclusion.

When the above conditions are satisfied, A is said to be Noetherian. Alternatively, the ring A is Noetherian if is a Noetherian module when regarded as a module over itself.

A Noetherian domain is a Noetherian ring which is also an integral domain.

Examples

\langle 0 \rangle \subset \langle x \rangle \subset \langle x,x-1 \rangle \subset \langle x,x-1,x-2 \rangle \subset \cdots .\,

Useful Criteria

If A is a Noetherian ring, then we have the following useful results:

  1. The quotient A/I is Noetherian for any ideal I.
  2. The localization of A by a multiplicative subset S is again Noetherian.
  3. Hilbert's Basis Theorem: The polynomial ring A[X] is Noetherian (hence so is A[X_1,\ldots,X_n]).

References

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