Persistence of homology over commutative Noetherian rings (Q2675074)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Persistence of homology over commutative Noetherian rings
scientific article

    Statements

    Persistence of homology over commutative Noetherian rings (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    20 September 2022
    0 references
    A commutative noetherian ring \(R\) is said to be Tor-persistent if any finitely generated \(R\)-module \(M\) for which \(\mathrm{Tor}_{i}^{R}(M,M)=0\) for sufficiently large \(i\) has finite projective dimension. For example, regular rings and locally complete intersection rings are known to be Tor-persistent. No example of a ring that is not Tor-persistent has been found so far, so the natural question remains to be answered whether every ring is Tor-persistent? The purpose of this paper is to present some new non-trivial examples of Tor-persistent rings. A central result of this work is that a noetherian local ring \(R\) is Tor-persistent if its completion is of the form \(Q/\langle \underline{a} \rangle\), where \(\underline{a}\) is a regular sequence on \(Q\), that further satisfies any one of the following conditions: \begin{itemize} \item[1.] \(\mathrm{edim}(Q)-\mathrm{depth}(Q)\leq 3\). \item[2.] \(\mathrm{edim}(Q)-\mathrm{depth}(Q)= 4\) and \(Q\) is Gorenstein. \item[3.] \(\mathrm{edim}(Q)-\mathrm{depth}(Q)= 4\) and \(Q\) is is Cohen-Macaulay, almost complete intersection, with \(1/2 \in Q\). \item[4.] \(Q\) is one link from a complete intersection. \item[5.] \(Q\) is two links from a complete intersection and is Gorenstein. \item[6.] \(Q\) is Golod. \item[7.] \(Q\) is Cohen-Macaulay with \(\mathrm{mult}(Q)\leq 7\). \end{itemize}
    0 references
    finite injective dimension
    0 references
    finite projective dimension
    0 references
    Tor
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers