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Commutative rings, modules, ideals, homological algebra, computational aspects, invariant theory, connections to algebraic geometry and combinatorics.

7 votes
2 answers
808 views

Determining the kernel of the localization map when defining the localization by generators ...

All rings considered will be commutative and unitary. Let $A$ be a ring, $S \subseteq A$ a multiplicatively closed subset. The localization $\lambda_S : A \longrightarrow A[S^{-1}]$ can be characteriz …
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2 votes

Determining the kernel of the localization map when defining the localization by generators ...

The proof of (LC3), in the given setting, is surprisingly difficult, or, at least, elaborate. Let $a \in A$ with $\lambda_S(a) = [a] = 0$ in $A[S^{-1}]$, i.e. one has \begin{equation} \tag{1} a \i …
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7 votes
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Is there a Swan-style description of topological K-homology?

A celebrated result of Swan [1] states that, on a compact Hausdorff space $X$, the category of finite rank complex vector bundles is equivalent to the category of finitely generated projective $\mathc …
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11 votes
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Original proof of Hilbert's syzygy theorem

See Theory of Algebraic Invariants
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