Let
A be a
commutative ring with an
ideal I. A
divided power structure (or
PD-structure, after the French
puissances divisées) on
I is a collection of maps \gamma_n : I \to A for
n = 0, 1, 2, ... such that: • \gamma_0(x) = 1 and \gamma_1(x) = x for x \in I, while \gamma_n(x) \in I for
n > 0. • \gamma_n(x + y) = \sum_{i=0}^n \gamma_{n-i}(x) \gamma_i(y) for x, y \in I. • \gamma_n(\lambda x) = \lambda^n \gamma_n(x) for \lambda \in A, x \in I. • \gamma_m(x) \gamma_n(x) = ((m, n)) \gamma_{m+n}(x) for x \in I, where ((m, n)) = \frac{(m+n)!}{m! n!} is an integer. • \gamma_n(\gamma_m(x)) = C_{n, m} \gamma_{mn}(x) for x \in I and m > 0, where C_{n, m} = \frac{(mn)!}{(m!)^n n!} is an integer. For convenience of notation, \gamma_n(x) is often written as x^{[n]} when it is clear what divided power structure is meant. The term
divided power ideal refers to an ideal with a given divided power structure, and
divided power ring refers to a ring with a given ideal with divided power structure. Homomorphisms of divided power algebras are ring homomorphisms that respect the divided power structure on its source and target. == Examples ==