Goldie dimension of rings of fractions of <em>C</em>(<em>X</em>)

Original Articles

Goldie dimension of rings of fractions of C(X)

Published in: Quaestiones Mathematicae
Volume 38 , issue 1 , 2015 , pages: 139–154
DOI: 10.2989/16073606.2014.923189
Author(s): S. Afrooz Department of Mathematics, Iran , F. Azarpanah Department of Mathematics, Iran , O.A.S. Karamzadeh Department of Mathematics, Iran

Abstract

It is observed that X is an F-space if and only if C(X) is locally a domain (i.e., C(X)P is a domain for each prime ideal P of C(X)). Consequently, X is an F-space if and only if the primary ideals of C(X) in any given maximal ideal in C(X) are comparable. Some of the properties of C(X), where X is an F-space, are extended to general reduced Bézout rings. It is observed that whenever X is an infinite connected F-space, then C(X) is a natural example of a non-Noetherian ring without nontrivial idempotents which is locally a domain but not a domain. We observe that the rank of a point x ∈ βX, in case finite, coincides with the Goldie dimension of C(X)Mx and give an example to show that the Goldie dimension of C(X)Mx is not necessarily equal to the cardinality of the set of minimal prime ideals in Mx. Motivated by these facts and some other appropriate ones, we define the rank of a point x ∈ βX to be the Goldie dimension of C(X)Mx. Finally, for each cardinal a, we show that there exists a space X and a multiplicatively closed set S in C(X) such that the Goldie dimension of S–1 C(X) is a.

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