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1992 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

The Algebra-Geometry Dictionary

Authors : David Cox, John Little, Donal O’Shea

Published in: Ideals, Varieties, and Algorithms

Publisher: Springer New York

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In this chapter, we will explore the correspondence between ideals and varieties. In §§1 and 2, we will prove the Nullstellensatz, a celebrated theorem which identifies exactly which ideals correspond to varieties. This will allow us to construct a “dictionary” between geometry and algebra, whereby any statement about varieties can be translated into a statement about ideals (and conversely). We will pursue this theme in §§3 and 4, where we will define a number of natural algebraic operations on ideals and study their geometric analogues. In keeping with the computational emphasis of this course, we will develop algorithms to carry out the algebraic operations. In §§5 and 6, we will study the more important algebraic and geometric concepts arising out of the Hilbert Basis Theorem: notably the possibility of decomposing a variety into a union of simpler varieties and the corresponding algebraic notion of writing an ideal as an intersection of simpler ideals.

Metadata
Title
The Algebra-Geometry Dictionary
Authors
David Cox
John Little
Donal O’Shea
Copyright Year
1992
Publisher
Springer New York
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-2181-2_4

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