Lack of unique factorization of ideals
I'm aware of the result that integral domains admit unique f
Amappyaccon22j7e
Answered question
2022-05-07
Lack of unique factorization of ideals I'm aware of the result that integral domains admit unique factorization of ideals iff they are Dedekind domains. It's clear that is not a Dedekind domain, as it is not integrally closed. I'm having difficulty demonstrating directly that does not admit unique factorization of ideals. Obviously we only need one example of an ideal that doesn't have a unique factorization into prime ideals, but a good answer would provide either a process or some intuition in finding such an example.
Answer & Explanation
Maeve Holloway
Beginner2022-05-08Added 25 answers
In the ring , the ideal is prime since it has index 2 in the ring. Note the principal ideal generated by 2 in If there were unique factorization of ideals into products of prime ideals in then the equation would imply P=(2), which is false since is in P but it is not in (2). In fact we have and this can be used to prove the ideal (2) does not even admit a factorization into prime ideals, as follows. If Q is a prime ideal factor of (2) then , so , which implies (from Q being prime), so Q=P since P is a maximal ideal in . If (2) is a product of prime ideals then it must be a power of P, and for , so the strict inclusions imply (2) is not for any . The "intuition" that the ideal is the key ideal to look at here is that P is the conductor ideal of the order . The problems with unique factorization of ideals in an order are in some sense encoded in the conductor ideal of the order. So you want to learn what a conductor ideal is and look at it in several examples. For example, the ideals I in which are relatively prime to P (meaning I+P is the unit ideal (1)) do admit unique factorization into products of prime ideals relatively prime to P. That illustrates why problems with unique factorization of ideals in are closely tied to the ideal P. If you look at the ideal notation P in the larger ring , which we know has unique factorization of ideals, then we don't run into any problem like above because in , so P′ is actually a principal ideal and the "paradoxical" equation in corresponds in to the dumb equation . (The ideal P′ in is prime since the quotient ring mod P′ is a field of size 4: is isom. as a ring to , so Z is isom. to , which is a field of size 4.)