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Hilbert's basis theorem

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In mathematics Hilbert's basis theorem asserts that every ideal of a polynomial ring over a field has a finite generating set (a finite basis in Hilbert's terminology).

In modern algebra, rings whose ideals have this property are called Noetherian rings. Every field, and the ring of integers are Noetherian rings. So, the theorem can be generalized and restated as: every polynomial ring over a Noetherian ring is also Noetherian.

The theorem was stated and proved by David Hilbert in 1890 in his seminal article on invariant theory[1], where he solved several problems on invariants. In this article, he proved also two other fundamental theorems on polynomials, the Nullstellensatz (zero-locus theorem) and the syzygy theorem (theorem on relations). These three theorems were the starting point of the interpretation of algebraic geometry in terms of commutative algebra. In particular, the basis theorem implies that every algebraic set is the intersection of a finite number of hypersurfaces.

Another aspect of this article had a great impact on mathematics of the 20th century; this is the systematic use of non-constructive methods. For example, the basis theorem asserts that every ideal has a finite generator set, but the original proof does not provide any way to compute it for a specific ideal. This approach was so astonishing for mathematicians of that time that the first version of the article was rejected by Paul Gordan, the greatest specialist of invariants of that time, with the comment "This is not mathematics. This is theology."[2] Later, he recognized "I have convinced myself that even theology has its merits."[3]

Statement

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If is a ring, let denote the ring of polynomials in the indeterminate over . Hilbert proved that if is "not too large", in the sense that if is Noetherian, the same must be true for . Formally,

Hilbert's Basis Theorem. If is a Noetherian ring, then is a Noetherian ring.[4]

Corollary. If is a Noetherian ring, then is a Noetherian ring.

Hilbert proved the theorem (for the special case of multivariate polynomials over a field) in the course of his proof of finite generation of rings of invariants.[1] The theorem is interpreted in algebraic geometry as follows: every algebraic set is the set of the common zeros of finitely many polynomials.

Hilbert's proof is highly non-constructive: it proceeds by induction on the number of variables, and, at each induction step uses the non-constructive proof for one variable less. Introduced more than eighty years later, Gröbner bases allow a direct proof that is as constructive as possible: Gröbner bases produce an algorithm for testing whether a polynomial belong to the ideal generated by other polynomials. So, given an infinite sequence of polynomials, one can construct algorithmically the list of those polynomials that do not belong to the ideal generated by the preceding ones. Gröbner basis theory implies that this list is necessarily finite, and is thus a finite basis of the ideal. However, for deciding whether the list is complete, one must consider every element of the infinite sequence, which cannot be done in the finite time allowed to an algorithm.

Proof

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Theorem. If is a left (resp. right) Noetherian ring, then the polynomial ring is also a left (resp. right) Noetherian ring.

Remark. We will give two proofs, in both only the "left" case is considered; the proof for the right case is similar.

First proof

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Suppose is a non-finitely generated left ideal. Then by recursion (using the axiom of dependent choice) there is a sequence of polynomials such that if is the left ideal generated by then is of minimal degree. By construction, is a non-decreasing sequence of natural numbers. Let be the leading coefficient of and let be the left ideal in generated by . Since is Noetherian the chain of ideals

must terminate. Thus for some integer . So in particular,

Now consider

whose leading term is equal to that of ; moreover, . However, , which means that has degree less than , contradicting the minimality.

Second proof

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Let be a left ideal. Let be the set of leading coefficients of members of . This is obviously a left ideal over , and so is finitely generated by the leading coefficients of finitely many members of ; say . Let be the maximum of the set , and let be the set of leading coefficients of members of , whose degree is . As before, the are left ideals over , and so are finitely generated by the leading coefficients of finitely many members of , say

with degrees . Now let be the left ideal generated by:

We have and claim also . Suppose for the sake of contradiction this is not so. Then let be of minimal degree, and denote its leading coefficient by .

Case 1: . Regardless of this condition, we have , so is a left linear combination
of the coefficients of the . Consider
which has the same leading term as ; moreover while . Therefore and , which contradicts minimality.
Case 2: . Then so is a left linear combination
of the leading coefficients of the . Considering
we yield a similar contradiction as in Case 1.

Thus our claim holds, and which is finitely generated.

Note that the only reason we had to split into two cases was to ensure that the powers of multiplying the factors were non-negative in the constructions.

Applications

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Let be a Noetherian commutative ring. Hilbert's basis theorem has some immediate corollaries.

  1. By induction we see that will also be Noetherian.
  2. Since any affine variety over (i.e. a locus-set of a collection of polynomials) may be written as the locus of an ideal and further as the locus of its generators, it follows that every affine variety is the locus of finitely many polynomials — i.e. the intersection of finitely many hypersurfaces.
  3. If is a finitely-generated -algebra, then we know that , where is an ideal. The basis theorem implies that must be finitely generated, say , i.e. is finitely presented.

Formal proofs

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Formal proofs of Hilbert's basis theorem have been verified through the Mizar project (see HILBASIS file) and Lean (see ring_theory.polynomial).

References

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  1. ^ a b Hilbert, David (1890). "Über die Theorie der algebraischen Formen". Mathematische Annalen. 36 (4): 473–534. doi:10.1007/BF01208503. ISSN 0025-5831. S2CID 179177713.
  2. ^ Reid 1996, p. 34.
  3. ^ Reid 1996, p. 37.
  4. ^ Roman 2008, p. 136 §5 Theorem 5.9

Further reading

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