Prime ideals and finiteness conditions for Gabriel topologies over commutative rings (Q1201195)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Prime ideals and finiteness conditions for Gabriel topologies over commutative rings |
scientific article |
Statements
Prime ideals and finiteness conditions for Gabriel topologies over commutative rings (English)
0 references
17 January 1993
0 references
The authors study the Gabriel topologies on rings with restriction either on ideals from that topologies or on chains of ideals from them. If \(P\) is a set of prime ideals of \(R\), then by \({\mathfrak C}(P)\) is denoted the Gabriel topology on \(R\) consisting from those ideals which are not contained in \(p\), where \(p\in P\). The Gabriel topologies of the form \({\mathfrak C}(P)\) where \(P\subseteq\text{Spec}(R)\) are called primal. A Gabriel topology is called of finite type (principal) if it has a base consisting from finitely generated (principal) ideals. It is proved (theorem 1.1) that a Gabriel topology \({\mathfrak C}\) is primal \(\Leftrightarrow{\mathfrak C}\) is an intersection of topologies of finite type \(\Leftrightarrow{\mathfrak C}\) is an intersection of principal topologies. A Gabriel topology \({\mathfrak C}\) is of finite type if and only if it satisfies the following condition: If the union of a totally ordered chain of ideals is in \({\mathfrak C}\), then one of the ideals must be in \({\mathfrak C}\) (theorem 1.2). The paper contains in terms of the Gabriel topologies a generalization of a theorem of \textit{I. S. Cohen} which says that if every prime ideal of a commutative ring \(R\) is finitely generated, then \(R\) is noetherian. It is proved, for example, that if every prime ideal from a Gabriel topology \({\mathfrak C}\) is finitely generated, then every ideal from \({\mathfrak C}\) is finitely generated (corollary 1). Special kinds of primal topologies are studied in the paper and some constructions of primal topologies are given. Some examples are given which show that a number of classes of Gabriel topologies are different.
0 references
prime ideals
0 references
finiteness conditions
0 references
Gabriel topologies
0 references