Maths encyclopedia and lessons  
Search

Mathematics Encyclopedia and Lessons

 
     
 

Lessons

Popular
Subjects

algebra
arithmetic
calculus
equations
geometry
differential equations
trigonometry
number theory
probability theory
more
 

References

applied mathematics
mathematical games
mathematicians
more
 
 

Krull dimension

In commutative algebra, the Krull dimension of a ring R, named after Wolfgang Krull (1899 - 1971), is defined to be the number of strict inclusions in a maximal chain of prime ideals. We take the supremum of chain lengths if no maximal chain can be found. For example, in the ring (Z/8Z)[x,y,z] we can consider the chain

(2) ⊂ (2,x) ⊂ (2,x,y) ⊂ (2,x,y,z)

Each of these ideals is prime, so the Krull dimension of (Z/8Z)[x, y, z] is at least the number of strict inclusions in this chain, that is, 3. In fact the dimension of this ring is exactly 3.

An alternate way of phrasing this definition is to say that the Krull dimension of R is the largest height of any prime ideal of R.

According to this convention, a integral domain of dimension zero is a field. Dedekind domains and discrete valuation rings have dimension one.

If a ring R has Krull dimension k, then the polynomial ring R[x] will have dimension between k + 1 and 2k + 1. If R is Noetherian, then the dimension of R[x] will be exactly k + 1.

01-04-2007 01:18:14
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org
under the GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy