Serre's criterion for normality
In algebra, Serre's criterion for normality, introduced by Jean-Pierre Serre, gives necessary and sufficient conditions for a commutative Noetherian ring A to be a normal ring. The criterion involves the following two conditions for A:
is a regular local ring for any prime ideal
of height ≤ k.
for any prime ideal
.[1]
The statement is:
- A is a reduced ring
hold.
- A is a normal ring
hold.
- A is a Cohen–Macaulay ring
hold for all k.
Items 1, 3 trivially follow from the definitions. Item 2 is much deeper.
For an integral domain, the criterion is due to Krull. The general case is due to Serre.
Proof
Sufficiency
(After EGA IV. Theorem 5.8.6.)
Suppose A satisfies S2 and R1. Then A in particular satisfies S1 and R0; hence, it is reduced. If are the minimal prime ideals of A, then the total ring of fractions K of A is the direct product of the residue fields
: see total ring of fractions of a reduced ring. That means we can write
where
are idempotents in
and such that
. Now, if A is integrally closed in K, then each
is integral over A and so is in A; consequently, A is a direct product of integrally closed domains Aei's and we are done. Thus, it is enough to show that A is integrally closed in K.
For this end, suppose
where all f, g, ai's are in A and g is moreover a non-zerodivisor. We want to show:
.
Now, the condition S2 says that is unmixed of height one; i.e., each associated primes
of
has height one. By the condition R1, the localization
is integrally closed and so
, where
is the localization map, since the integral equation persists after localization. If
is the primary decomposition, then, for any i, the radical of
is an associated prime
of
and so
; the equality here is because
is a
-primary ideal. Hence, the assertion holds.
Necessity
Suppose A is a normal ring. For S2, let be an associated prime of
for a non-zerodivisor f; we need to show it has height one. Replacing A by a localization, we can assume A is a local ring with maximal ideal
. By definition, there is an element g in A such that
and
. Put y = g/f in the total ring of fractions. If
, then
is a faithful
-module and is a finitely generated A-module; consequently,
is integral over A and thus in A, a contradiction. Hence,
or
, which implies
has height one (Krull's principal ideal theorem).
For R1, we argue in the same way: let be a prime ideal of height one. Localizing at
we assume
is a maximal ideal and the similar argument as above shows that
is in fact principal. Thus, A is a regular local ring.
Notes
References
- Grothendieck, Alexandre; Dieudonné, Jean (1965). "Éléments de géométrie algébrique: IV. Étude locale des schémas et des morphismes de schémas, Seconde partie". Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS 24. doi:10.1007/bf02684322. MR 0199181.
- H. Matsumura, Commutative algebra, 1970.