Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4584468 | Journal of Algebra | 2015 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Let D be an integral domain satisfying ACCP. We refine the classical notion of (factorization) length by recursively defining the length of a nonzero element to be the least ordinal strictly greater than the lengths of its proper divisors. This gives a surjective function L:DââL(D), where L(D), called the length of D, is the least ordinal strictly greater than the length of any nonzero element. We show that an ordinal is the length of a domain satisfying ACCP if and only if it is of the form Ïβ. We give some conditions for when monoid domains, generalized power series domains, inert extensions, or localizations at splitting sets satisfy ACCP, and calculate the lengths of these domains in these cases. Finally, for each positive integer nâ¥2 and each ordinal μâ¥n, we construct a domain D satisfying ACCP and an xâDâ with L(x)=μ and l(x)=n, where l(x) denotes the number of factors in a minimum length atomic factorization of x.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Algebra and Number Theory
Authors
D.D. Anderson, J.R. Juett,