transfinite arithmetic, cardinal arithmetic, ordinal arithmetic
prime field, p-adic integer, p-adic rational number, p-adic complex number
arithmetic geometry, function field analogy
Let be an integral domain and let . We call gcd of and an element such that:
divides both and ,
for every element , if divides both and , then divides .
In other words, a gcd of and is a meet in the preordered set i.e. a cartesian product of and in seen as thin category.
It follows from the properties of cartesian products that a gcd is unique up to isomorphism in the category and that every element isomorphic to a gcd of and is also a gcd of and .
That is, if a gcd of and exists, then the gcd’s of and are exactly the products of this first gcd by any invertible element.
A GCD domain is an integral domain such that every pair of elements admits a gcd.
Let be an integral domain and let . We call lcm of and an element such that:
both and divides ,
for every element , if both and divide , then divides .
The following proposition treats the interactions of gcd, lcm and .
Let be an integral domain.
Let . Then and .
Let . Then, exists and is equal to iff both and are zero.
Let . Then exists and is equal to iff one of or is zero.
We have that divides both and . If divides both and , then in particular divides . Therefore . We have that both and divides . If both and divides , then in particular divides . Therefore .
If , then both and are zero since divides both of them. If both and are zero, we already know from the previous point that .
If , then since divides . It follows that either or is zero. Now, suppose that one of or is zero. We already know that both and divide . Suppose that is such that both and divides . One of being zero, it follows that divides . We conclude that .
We will now proceed to prove that a GCD domain can equivalently be defined as an integral domain such that every pair of elements admits an lcm. First, we need a lemma about the compatibility of gcd’s with multiplication.
Let be an integral domain. Let and let . Suppose that and exist. Then (up to multiplication by an invertible element).
If then, we have . We can therefore suppose that is nonzero.
Since divides both and , we obtain that divides both and . Hence, .
We know that divides both and . Therefore, . It follows that for some . It follows that divides both and i.e. there exists such that and . Since is nonzero, we deduce that and . Thus divides both and . Hence, . By multiplying by , we obtain that .
From the two previous points, we deduce that and are associated.
We can now prove that:
Let be an integral domain and let . Then exists iff exists for every .
: Suppose that are such that exists for every . Then, in particular exists. We can thus write:
and
where .
We claim that is a lcm of and .
Indeed, both and divide . Moreover, suppose that is such that and . Then and . It follows that . Thus . Since are not both zero, we have . We deduce that . We have verified the two conditions for to be a lcm of and .
: Suppose that are such that exists. We can then write:
and
and
where .
We claim that is a gcd of and .
We can thus write:
and
from which it follows that and . Therefore, divides both and .
Suppose now that is such that divides both and . Then is nonzero. Moreover, . Write where . We have that (since ) and (since ). Therefore, . Write where . We obtain . Hence, . Since both and are nonzero, we have that is nonzero. It follows that . Therefore .
We have verified the two conditions for to be a gcd of and . We can thus write .
Let . We want to show that is a gcd of and .
We know that divides both and . It follows that divides both and .
Let be such that divides both and . Then is nonzero. Write from which we have . We obtain that (since ). Moreover, . It follows that . By multiplying by , we get that . Since , we obtain that .
We have verified the two conditions for to be a gcd of and .
Let be an integral domain. Then is a GCD domain iff every pair of elements of admits an lcm.
Let be a GCD domain. We already know that for every . The same is true for lcm’s.
Let be a GCD domain. Let and let . Then (up to multiplication by a unit).
If then the two sides of the equation are zero. We can thus suppose that is nonzero.
We know that , that . Therefore, and . Hence .
We know that , therefore . It follows that we can write:
where . Hence both and divides . Since is nonzero, we obtain that both and divides . Hence, . By multiplying by , we obtain that .
From the two previous points, we conclude that and are associated.
The compatibility of the product with gcd’s and lcm’s implies that the multiplicative monoid of an integral domain is a prelattice-ordered commutative monoid.
Every GCD domain of dimension at most 1 is a Bézout domain.
The ring of integers
For any GCD domain , the polynomial ring on one generator
The ring of entire holomorphic functions on the complex plane
Henri Lombardi, Claude Quitté (2010): Commutative algebra: Constructive methods (Finite projective modules) Translated by Tania K. Roblo, Springer (2015) (doi:10.1007/978-94-017-9944-7, pdf)
Last revised on August 19, 2024 at 15:06:27. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.