Gordan's lemma

In convex geometry, Gordan's lemma states that the semigroup of integral points in the dual cone of a rational convex polyhedral cone is finitely generated.[1] In algebraic geometry, the prime spectrum of the semigroup algebra of such a semigroup is, by definition, an affine toric variety; thus, the lemma says an affine toric variety is indeed an algebraic variety. The lemma is named after the German mathematician Paul Gordan (1837–1912).

Proof

There are topological and algebraic proofs.

Topological proof

Let \sigma be the cone as given in the lemma. Let u_1, \dots, u_r be the integral vectors so that \sigma = \{ x \mid \langle u_i, x \rangle \ge 0, 1 \le i \le r \}. Then the u_i's generate the dual cone \sigma^{\vee}; indeed, writing C for the cone generated by u_i's, we have: \sigma \subset C^{\vee}, which must be the equality. Now, if x is in the semigroup

S_\sigma = \sigma^\vee \cap \mathbb{Z}^d,

then it can be written as

x = \sum_i n_i u_i + \sum_i r_i u_i

where n_i are nonnegative integers and 0 \le r_i \le 1. But since x and the first sum on the right-hand side are integral, the second sum is also integral and thus there can only be finitely many possibilities for the second sum (the topological reason). Hence, S_{\sigma} is finitely generated.

Algebraic proof

The proof[2] is based on a fact that a semigroup S is finitely generated if and only if its semigroup algebra \mathbb{C}[S] is finitely generated algebra over \mathbb{C}. To prove Gordan's lemma, by induction (cf. the proof above), it is enough to prove the statement: for any unital subsemigroup S of \mathbb{Z}^d,

If S is finitely generated, then S^+ = S \cap \{ x \mid \langle x, v \rangle \ge 0 \}, v an integral vector, is finitely generated.

Put A = \mathbb{C}[S], which has a basis \chi^a, \, a \in S. It has \mathbb{Z}-grading given by

A_n = \operatorname{span} \{ \chi^a \mid a \in S, \langle a, v \rangle = n \}.

By assumption, A is finitely generated and thus is Noetherian. It follows from the algebraic lemma below that \mathbb{C}[S^+] = \oplus_0^\infty A_n is a finitely generated algebra over A_0. Now, the semigroup S_0 = S \cap \{ x \mid \langle x, v \rangle = 0 \} is the image of S under a linear projection, thus finitely generated and so A_0
= \mathbb{C}[S_0] is finitely generated. Hence, S^+ is finitely generated then.

Lemma: Let A be a \mathbb{Z}-graded ring. If A is a Noetherian ring, then A^+ = \oplus_0^{\infty} A_n is a finitely generated A_0-algebra.

Proof: Let I be the ideal of A generated by all homogeneous elements of A of positive degree. Since A is Noetherian, I is actually generated by finitely many f_i's, homogeneous of positive degree. If f is homogeneous of positive degree, then we can write f = \sum_i g_i f_i with g_i homogeneous. If f has sufficieny large degree, then each g_i has degree positive and strictly less than that of f. Also, each degree piece A_n is a finitely generated A_0-module. (Proof: Let N_i be an increasing chain of finitely generated submodules of A_n with union A_n. Then the chain of the ideals N_i A stabilizes in finite steps; so does the chain N_i = N_i A \cap A_n.) Thus, by induction on degree, we see A^+ is a finitely generated A_0-algebra.

References

  1. Cox, Lecture 1. Proposition 1.11.
  2. Bruns–Gubeladze, Lemma 4.12.

See also


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