Dedekind-Hasse valuation
If D is an integral domain then it is a PID iff it has a Dedekind-Hasse valuation, that is, a function ν:D-{0}→ℤ+ such that for any a,b∈D-{0} either
-
•
a∈(b)
or
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•
∃α∈(a)∃β∈(b)[0<ν(α+β)<ν(b)]
Proof: First, let ν be a Dedekind-Hasse valuation and let I be an ideal of an integral domain D. Take some b∈I with ν(b) minimal (this exists because the integers are well-ordered) and some a∈I such that a≠0. I must contain both (a) and (b), and since it is closed under addition, α+β∈I for any α∈(a),β∈(b).
Since ν(b) is minimal, the second possibility above is ruled out, so it follows that a∈(b). But this holds for any a∈I, so I=(b), and therefore every ideal is princple.
For the converse, let D be a PID. Then define ν(u)=1 for any unit. Any non-zero, non-unit can be factored into a finite product of irreducibles (since http://planetmath.org/node/PIDsareUFDsevery PID is a UFD), and every such factorization of a is of the same length, r. So for a∈D, a non-zero non-unit, let ν(a)=r+1. Obviously r∈ℤ+.
Then take any a,b∈D-{0} and suppose a∉(b). Then take the ideal of elements of the form {α+β|α∈(a),β∈(b)}. Since this is a PID, it is a principal ideal (c) for some r∈D-{0}, and since 0+b=b∈(c), there is some non-unit x∈D such that xc=b. Then N(b)=N(xr). But since x is not a unit, the factorization of b must be longer than the factorization of c, so ν(b)>ν(c), so ν is a Dedekind-Hasse valuation.
Title | Dedekind-Hasse valuation |
---|---|
Canonical name | DedekindHasseValuation |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 12:51:16 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 12:51:16 |
Owner | Henry (455) |
Last modified by | Henry (455) |
Numerical id | 5 |
Author | Henry (455) |
Entry type | Definition |
Classification | msc 13G05 |
Related topic | EuclideanValuation |
Defines | Dedekind-Hasse norm |
Defines | Dedekind-Hasse valuation |