restricted power series#Tate algebra

{{short description|Formal power series with coefficients tending to 0}}

In algebra, the ring of restricted power series is the subring of a formal power series ring that consists of power series whose coefficients approach zero as degree goes to infinity.{{Citation | title=Stacks Project, Tag 0AKZ | url=http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/0AKZ}}. Over a non-archimedean complete field, the ring is also called a Tate algebra. Quotient rings of the ring are used in the study of a formal algebraic space as well as rigid analysis, the latter over non-archimedean complete fields.

Over a discrete topological ring, the ring of restricted power series coincides with a polynomial ring; thus, in this sense, the notion of "restricted power series" is a generalization of a polynomial.

Definition

Let A be a linearly topologized ring, separated and complete and \{ I_{\lambda} \} the fundamental system of open ideals. Then the ring of restricted power series is defined as the projective limit of the polynomial rings over A/I_{\lambda}:

:A \langle x_1, \dots, x_n \rangle = \varprojlim_{\lambda} A/I_{\lambda}[x_1, \dots, x_n].{{harvnb|Grothendieck|Dieudonné|1960|loc=Ch. 0, § 7.5.1.}}{{harvnb|Bourbaki|2006|loc=Ch. III, § 4. Definition 2 and Proposition 3.}}

In other words, it is the completion of the polynomial ring A[x_1, \dots, x_n] with respect to the filtration \{ I_{\lambda}[x_1, \dots, x_n] \}. Sometimes this ring of restricted power series is also denoted by A \{ x_1, \dots, x_n \}.

Clearly, the ring A \langle x_1, \dots, x_n \rangle can be identified with the subring of the formal power series ring Ax_1, \dots, x_n that consists of series \sum c_{\alpha} x^{\alpha} with coefficients c_{\alpha} \to 0; i.e., each I_\lambda contains all but finitely many coefficients c_{\alpha}.

Also, the ring satisfies (and in fact is characterized by) the universal property:{{harvnb|Grothendieck|Dieudonné|1960|loc=Ch. 0, § 7.5.3.}} for (1) each continuous ring homomorphism A \to B to a linearly topologized ring B, separated and complete and (2) each elements b_1, \dots, b_n in B, there exists a unique continuous ring homomorphism

:A \langle x_1, \dots, x_n \rangle \to B, \, x_i \mapsto b_i

extending A \to B.

Tate algebra

In rigid analysis, when the base ring A is the valuation ring of a complete non-archimedean field (K, | \cdot |), the ring of restricted power series tensored with K,

:T_n = K \langle \xi_1, \dots \xi_n \rangle = A \langle \xi_1, \dots, \xi_n \rangle \otimes_A K

is called a Tate algebra, named for John Tate.{{harvnb|Fujiwara|Kato|2018|loc=Ch 0, just after Proposition 9.3.}} It is equivalently the subring of formal power series k\xi_1, \dots, \xi_n which consists of series convergent on \mathfrak{o}_{\overline{k}}^n, where \mathfrak{o}_{\overline{k}} := \{x \in \overline{k} : |x| \leq 1\} is the valuation ring in the algebraic closure \overline{k}.

The maximal spectrum of T_n is then a rigid-analytic space that models an affine space in rigid geometry.

Define the Gauss norm of f = \sum a_{\alpha} \xi^{\alpha} in T_n by

:\|f\| = \max_{\alpha} |a_\alpha|.

This makes T_n a Banach algebra over k; i.e., a normed algebra that is complete as a metric space. With this norm, any ideal I of T_n is closed{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.3. Corollary 8}} and thus, if I is radical, the quotient T_n/I is also a (reduced) Banach algebra called an affinoid algebra.

Some key results are:

  • (Weierstrass division) Let g \in T_n be a \xi_n-distinguished series of order s; i.e., g = \sum_{\nu = 0}^{\infty} g_{\nu} \xi_n^{\nu} where g_{\nu} \in T_{n-1}, g_s is a unit element and | g_s | = \|g\| > |g_v | for \nu > s.{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Definition 6.}} Then for each f \in T_n, there exist a unique q \in T_n and a unique polynomial r \in T_{n-1}[\xi_n] of degree < s such that
  • :f = qg + r.{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Theorem 8.}}
  • (Weierstrass preparation) As above, let g be a \xi_n-distinguished series of order s. Then there exist a unique monic polynomial f \in T_{n-1}[\xi_n] of degree s and a unit element u \in T_n such that g = f u.{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Corollary 9.}}
  • (Noether normalization) If \mathfrak{a} \subset T_n is an ideal, then there is a finite homomorphism T_d \hookrightarrow T_n/\mathfrak{a}.{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Corollary 11.}}

As consequence of the division, preparation theorems and Noether normalization, T_n is a Noetherian unique factorization domain of Krull dimension n.{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Proposition 14, Proposition 15, Proposition 17.}} An analog of Hilbert's Nullstellensatz is valid: the radical of an ideal is the intersection of all maximal ideals containing the ideal (we say the ring is Jacobson).{{harvnb|Bosch|2014|loc=§ 2.2. Proposition 16.}}

Results

{{expand section|date=April 2020}}

Results for polynomial rings such as Hensel's lemma, division algorithms (or the theory of Gröbner bases) are also true for the ring of restricted power series. Throughout the section, let A denote a linearly topologized ring, separated and complete.

  • (Hensel) Let \mathfrak m \subset A be a maximal ideal and \varphi : A \to k := A/\mathfrak{m} the quotient map. Given an F in A\langle \xi \rangle, if \varphi(F) = gh for some monic polynomial g \in k[\xi] and a restricted power series h \in k\langle \xi \rangle such that g, h generate the unit ideal of k \langle \xi \rangle, then there exist G in A[\xi] and H in A\langle \xi \rangle such that
  • :F = G H, \, \varphi(G) = g, \varphi(H) = h.{{harvnb|Bourbaki|2006|loc=Ch. III, § 4. Theorem 1.}}

Notes

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References

  • {{cite book |last=Bourbaki |first=N. |year=2006 |title=Algèbre commutative: Chapitres 1 à 4 |publisher=Springer Berlin Heidelberg |isbn=9783540339373}}
  • {{EGA|book=1}}
  • {{citation|author1=Bosch |first=Siegfried |last2=Güntzer |first2=Ulrich |last3=Remmert |first3=Reinhold |title=Non-archimedean analysis|chapter=Chapter 5|publisher=Springer|year=1984}}
  • {{citation|author1=Bosch |first=Siegfried |title=Lectures on Formal and Rigid Geometry |year=2014 |isbn=9783319044170 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tARYBAAAQBAJ}}
  • {{citation|last1=Fujiwara |first1=Kazuhiro |last2=Kato |first2=Fumiharu |year=2018 |title=Foundations of Rigid Geometry I |url=https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/foundations-of-rigid-geometry-i}}

See also