Math 634 — Spring 2002 Commutative Algebra

Instructor: Michael Stillman
Time: MWF 9:05-9:55
Room: Malott 206

Textbooks:

  1. Atiyah and Macdonald: Introduction to Commutative Algebra
  2. Eisenbud: Commutative Algebra (recommended)

Math 634 will be a first course in commutative algebra, at the level of Atiyah-Macdonald. Besides the material of this book, we will also cover Groebner bases and some of their applications. Many examples will also be given.

Tentative list of topics:

  • Groebner bases and applications
  • We will use these throughout the course to construct interesting examples

  • Prime ideals and operations on ideals
     
  • Modules, tensor products and operations on modules
     
  • Localizations
     
  • Primary decompositions
     
  • Integral dependence
  • This section includes some key theorems in commutative algebra: the going-up and going-down theorems, Hilbert's Nullstellensatz, and Noether's normalization theorem. If time permits, we will also describe an elegant algorithm for computing the integral closure of a ring.

  • Chain conditions (Noetherian rings, Artinian rings)
     
  • Primary decomposition for Noetherian rings
  • This is the key link between commutative algebra and algebraic geometry

  • Rings of dimension zero and one: Artinian rings and discrete valuation rings.
     
  • Completions
     
  • Dimension theory

    This is the culmination of what we do. We define dimension several different ways and then show that they are the same. This is a very basic, powerful set of results.

There will be weekly homeworks and probably also a project/presentation.