Abstract Generated abstract
This note studies orders in a finite separable field extension over a Dedekind ring and the module-theoretic condition under which finitely generated torsion-free modules split as direct sums of ideals. Building on a previously proved sufficiency result and on a theorem of Bass, it proves that such decompositions occur precisely when the order has cyclic index in the maximal order, equivalently when the quotient of the maximal order by the order is generated by one element. The necessity is reduced to showing that if the maximal order is generated by two elements as a module over the order, then the index is cyclic, using a lemma on relative primality in finite ring extensions.
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UDC 591.44
MATHEMATICS
Z. I. BOREVICH, Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR D. K. FADDEEV
A NOTE ON ORDERS WITH CYCLIC INDEX
1°. Let \(\mathfrak{o}\) be a Dedekind ring, \(k\) its field of fractions, \(K/k\) a finite separable extension, and \(\mathfrak{D}\) the integral closure of the ring \(\mathfrak{o}\) in the field \(K\). By a full \(\mathfrak{o}\)-module in \(K\) one means a finitely generated \(\mathfrak{o}\)-submodule of the field \(K\) containing \((K:k)\) elements linearly independent over \(k\). A full \(\mathfrak{o}\)-module in \(K\) containing the identity element of the field and being a ring is called an \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order of the field \(K\). Every \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order \(\Lambda\) of the field \(K\) is contained, as is known, in the maximal \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order \(\mathfrak{D}\).
In the paper \((^1)\) it is shown that if the \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order \(\Lambda\) has cyclic index in \(\mathfrak{D}\) (see the definition below), then every finitely generated torsion-free \(\Lambda\)-module decomposes into a direct sum of \(\Lambda\)-modules that are \(\Lambda\)-isomorphic to ideals of the ring \(\Lambda\). On the other hand, in Bass’s paper \((^2)\) it is established that if \(R\) is a Noetherian integral domain whose integral closure (in its field of fractions) is a finitely generated \(R\)-module, then every finitely generated torsion-free \(R\)-module decomposes into a direct sum of \(R\)-ideals if and only if every ideal of the ring \(R\) is generated by no more than two elements. (The integral closure of such a ring \(R\) is a Dedekind ring.)
It turns out that the following theorem is true (in the notation and assumptions given above).
Theorem. In order that every finitely generated torsion-free \(\Lambda\)-module decompose into a direct sum of \(\Lambda\)-ideals, it is necessary and sufficient that the \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order \(\Lambda\) have cyclic index in the maximal \(\mathfrak{o}\)-order \(\mathfrak{D}\) of the field \(K\).
The sufficiency of the condition, as already noted, was proved in \((^1)\). The necessity follows from the result of Bass \((^2)\) cited above and Lemma 1 below.
2°. Definition. Let \(\mathfrak{D}\) be a commutative ring with identity and \(\Lambda\) its subring whose identity coincides with the identity of the ring. We say that \(\Lambda\) has cyclic index in \(\mathfrak{D}\) if the factor-module \(\mathfrak{D}/\Lambda\), as a \(\Lambda\)-module, is cyclic (i.e., generated by one element).
The cyclicity of the index of \(\Lambda\) in \(\mathfrak{D}\) is evidently equivalent to the existence of an element \(\omega \in \mathfrak{D}\) such that \(\mathfrak{D} = \Lambda + \Lambda \omega\).
Lemma 1. If the ring \(\mathfrak{D}\), as a \(\Lambda\)-module, admits a system of \(\Lambda\)-generators consisting of two elements, then \(\Lambda\) has cyclic index in \(\mathfrak{D}\).
The proof of Lemma 1 is based on the following assertion.
Lemma 2. Suppose that the ring \(\mathfrak{D}\) is a finitely generated \(\Lambda\)-module. If elements \(\lambda_1, \ldots, \lambda_m\) of \(\Lambda\) are relatively prime in \(\mathfrak{D}\) (i.e., generate the unit ideal in \(\mathfrak{D}\)), then they are relatively prime also in the ring \(\Lambda\).
Proof. Let \(\mathfrak{D} = \Lambda \omega_1 + \cdots + \Lambda \omega_n\) and let \(\mathfrak{a} = \Lambda \lambda_1 + \cdots + \Lambda \lambda_m\). Since, by hypothesis, \(\mathfrak{a}\mathfrak{D} = \mathfrak{D}\), we have
\[ \omega_i = \sum_{j=1}^{n} \alpha_{ij}\omega_j \quad (1 \leq i \leq n), \tag{1} \]
where the coefficients \(\alpha_{ij}\) belong to the ideal \(\mathfrak{a}\). Denote by \(\Delta\) the deter-
divisor of the matrix \((a_{ij}) - E\), where \(E\) is the identity matrix of order \(n\). From (1) it follows easily that \(\Delta \omega_i = 0\) for all \(i = 1,\ldots,n\), and hence \(\Delta = 0\). But, since \(a_{ij} \in \mathfrak a\), we have \(\Delta \equiv 1 \pmod{\mathfrak a}\). Thus \(1 \in \mathfrak a\), and Lemma 2 is proved.
Proof of Lemma 1. Let \(\mathfrak D = \Lambda \omega_1 + \Lambda \omega_2\). Then \(1 = \lambda_1 \omega_1 + \lambda_2 \omega_2\), where \(\lambda_1, \lambda_2 \in \Lambda\). By Lemma 2, in the ring \(\Lambda\) there exist elements \(\lambda\) and \(\mu\) such that \(1 = \lambda_1 \mu - \lambda_2 \lambda\). Put \(\omega = \lambda \omega_1 + \mu \omega_2\). Since the systems \(\omega_1, \omega_2\) and \(1, \omega\) are related by a unimodular transformation, it follows that \(\mathfrak D = \Lambda + \Lambda \omega\), as was required to prove.
Leningrad Branchof the V. A. Steklov Mathematical Institute
of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR Received
3 VII 1965
References
¹ Z. I. Borevich, D. K. Faddeev, Tr. Mat. Inst. im. V. A. Steklova AN SSSR, 80, 51 (1965). ² H. Bass, Trans. Am. Math. Soc., 102, No. 2, 319 (1962).