On the ubiquity of Arf rings (Q6170630): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Added link to MaRDI item.
Set OpenAlex properties.
Property / OpenAlex ID
 
Property / OpenAlex ID: W4383266925 / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 08:45, 30 July 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7725183
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On the ubiquity of Arf rings
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 7725183

    Statements

    On the ubiquity of Arf rings (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    10 August 2023
    0 references
    The present paper provides a broad study of \textit{Arf rings}, along with introducing and studying the concept of \textit{weakly Arf} rings. The introduction of the paper begins by sketching the origin of Arf rings with roots in the geometry of curves. For example, the authors give an affirmative answer to a conjecture of Oscar Zariski concerning the equality of the \textit{Arf closure} and the \textit{strict closure}. Also, the (weakly) Arf property of certain class of rings, including Nagata idealization, invariant rings, semigroup rings, fibre products, determinantal rings, cyclic pure descends, polynomial extensions and certain localization of certain blow-ups are stdudied. An \textit{Arf ring} is Noetherian semilocal ring \(A\) such that \(A_M\) is a Cohen-Macaulay \(1\)-dimensional local ring for all maximal ideal \(M\), and such that \begin{itemize} \item[1.] Each integrally closed ideal of positive graded has a principal reduction. \item[2.] If for \(x,y,z\in A\) with \(x\) a non-zero divisor, \(y/x,z/x\) are integral over \(A\) then \(yz/x\in A\). \end{itemize} The authors of the present paper define for a Noetherian ring \(A\) to be a \textit{weakly Arf ring}, provided the condition \(2\) above is only required for \(A\) to be satisfied (here \(A\) is not necessarily semilocal and with no Cohen-Macaulay or dimension \(1\) assumption). Thus integrally closed domains and depth zero domains are examples of weakly Arf rings in this setting. For a one dimensional Cohen-Macaulay local ring \(A\) such that its residue field is infinite, or it is analytically irreducible, being weakly Arf and Arf are equivalent. However, the authors discuss examples of one dimensional Cohen-Macaulay local weakly Arf rings which are not Arf.
    0 references
    weakly Arf ring
    0 references
    strictly closed ring
    0 references
    arf ring
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references