Krull's principal ideal theorem
In commutative algebra, Krull's principal ideal theorem, named after Wolfgang Krull (1899–1971), gives a bound on the height of a principal ideal in a Noetherian ring. The theorem is sometimes referred to by its German name, Krulls Hauptidealsatz (Satz meaning "proposition" or "theorem").
Formally, if R is a Noetherian ring and I is a principal, proper ideal of R, then I has height at most one.
This theorem can be generalized to ideals that are not principal, and the result is often called Krull's height theorem. This says that if R is a Noetherian ring and I is a proper ideal generated by n elements of R, then I has height at most n.
The principal ideal theorem and the generalization, the height theorem, both follow from the fundamental theorem of dimension theory. Bourbaki's Commutative Algebra gives a direct proof. Kaplansky's Commutative ring includes a proof due to David Rees.
References
- Matsumura, Hideyuki (1970), Commutative Algebra, New York: Benjamin, see in particular section (12.I), p. 77
- http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~hochster/615W10/supDim.pdf