Jaffard ring

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In mathematics, a Jaffard ring is a type of ring, more general than a Noetherian ring. Formally, a Jaffard ring is a ring R such that

\dim R[T] = 1 + \dim R, \,

where "dim" denotes Krull dimension. A Jaffard ring that is also an integral domain is called a Jaffard domain.

The Jaffard property is satisfied by any Noetherian ring R, so examples of non-Jaffardian rings are quite difficult to find. Nonetheless, an example was given in 1953 by Abraham Seidenberg: the subring of

\overline{\mathbf{Q}} [[T]]

consisting of those formal power series whose constant term is rational.

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