Authors including
Serre,
Grothendieck, and
Matsumura define a
normal ring to be a ring whose
localizations at prime ideals are integrally closed domains. Such a ring is necessarily a
reduced ring, and this is sometimes included in the definition. In general, if
A is a
Noetherian ring whose localizations at maximal ideals are all domains, then
A is a finite product of domains. In particular, if
A is a Noetherian and normal ring, then the domains in the product are integrally closed domains. Conversely, any finite product of integrally closed domains is normal. In particular, if \operatorname{Spec}(A) is Noetherian, normal, and connected, then
A is an integrally closed domain. (Cf.
smooth variety.) Let
A be a noetherian ring. Then (
Serre's criterion)
A is normal if and only if it satisfies the following: for any prime ideal \mathfrak{p}, If \mathfrak{p} has height \le 1, then A_\mathfrak{p} is
regular (i.e., A_\mathfrak{p} is a
discrete valuation ring.) If \mathfrak{p} has height \ge 2, then A_\mathfrak{p} has depth \ge 2. Item (i) is often phrased as "regular in codimension 1". Note that (i) implies that the set of
associated primes Ass(A) has no
embedded primes, and, when (i) is the case, (ii) means that Ass(A/fA) has no embedded prime for any non-zerodivisor
f. In particular, a
Cohen-Macaulay ring satisfies (ii). Geometrically, we have the following: if
X is a
local complete intersection in a nonsingular variety; e.g.,
X itself is nonsingular, then
X is Cohen-Macaulay; i.e., the stalks \mathcal{O}_p of the structure sheaf are Cohen-Macaulay for all prime ideals p. Then we can say:
X is
normal (i.e., the stalks of its structure sheaf are all normal) if and only if it is regular in codimension 1. == Completely integrally closed domains ==