I-adic topology

1

In commutative algebra, the mathematical study of commutative rings, adic topologies are a family of topologies on the underlying set of a module, generalizing the p-adic topologies on the integers.

Definition

Let R be a commutative ring and M an R-module. Then each ideal ๐”ž of R determines a topology on M called the ๐”ž -adic topology, characterized by the pseudometric The family is a basis for this topology. An ๐”ž -adic topology is a linear topology (a topology generated by some submodules).

Properties

With respect to the topology, the module operations of addition and scalar multiplication are continuous, so that M becomes a topological module. However, M need not be Hausdorff; it is Hausdorff if and only ifso that d becomes a genuine metric. Related to the usual terminology in topology, where a Hausdorff space is also called separated, in that case, the ๐”ž-adic topology is called separated. By Krull's intersection theorem, if R is a Noetherian ring which is an integral domain or a local ring, it holds that for any proper ideal ๐”ž of R. Thus under these conditions, for any proper ideal ๐”ž of R and any R-module M, the ๐”ž-adic topology on M is separated. For a submodule N of M, the canonical homomorphism to M/N induces a quotient topology which coincides with the ๐”ž -adic topology. The analogous result is not necessarily true for the submodule N itself: the subspace topology need not be the ๐”ž -adic topology. However, the two topologies coincide when R is Noetherian and M finitely generated. This follows from the Artin-Rees lemma.

Completion

When M is Hausdorff, M can be completed as a metric space; the resulting space is denoted by \widehat M and has the module structure obtained by extending the module operations by continuity. It is also the same as (or canonically isomorphic to): where the right-hand side is an inverse limit of quotient modules under natural projection. For example, let be a polynomial ring over a field k and the (unique) homogeneous maximal ideal. Then, the formal power series ring over k in n variables.

Closed submodules

The ๐”ž -adic closure of a submodule is This closure coincides with N whenever R is ๐”ž -adically complete and M is finitely generated. R is called Zariski with respect to ๐”ž if every ideal in R is ๐”ž -adically closed. There is a characterization: ๐”ž if and only if ๐”ž is contained in the Jacobson radical of R. In particular a Noetherian local ring is Zariski with respect to the maximal ideal.

Sources

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