Let A &#x2286;<!-- ⊆ --> B be rings, B integral over A ; let <mi mathvari

slijmigrd

slijmigrd

Answered question

2022-07-14

Let A B be rings, B integral over A; let q , q be prime ideals of B such that q q and q c = q c = p say. Then q = q .
Question 1. Why n c = n c = m?
My attempt: Since p q, we have m = S 1 p S 1 q = n B p . But m is maximal in A p , which is not necessarily maximal in B p . I can't get m = n by this.
Question 2. When we use that notation A p , which means the localization S 1 A of A at the prime ideal p of A. But in this corollary, p doesn't necessarily be a prime ideal of B. Why can he write B p ? Should we write S 1 B rigorously?

Answer & Explanation

bap1287dg

bap1287dg

Beginner2022-07-15Added 13 answers

To answer your first question, look at the commutative diagram
A B A p B p
Going the right way, n is contracted to p by assumption. Hence the same holds for the left way. But the map Spec A p Spec A is well known to be injective and the sole pre-image of p is m. Thus n is contracted to m by the map A p B p . Of course the same arguments works for n .
For your second question, note that B is an A-module, so this is just the usual notation M p , when M is an A-module and p a prime of A.

Do you have a similar question?

Recalculate according to your conditions!

New Questions in Commutative Algebra

Ask your question.
Get an expert answer.

Let our experts help you. Answer in as fast as 15 minutes.

Didn't find what you were looking for?