The localization of a
commutative ring by a
multiplicatively closed set is a new ring S^{-1}R whose elements are fractions with numerators in and denominators in . If the ring is an
integral domain the construction generalizes and follows closely that of the
field of fractions, and, in particular, that of the
rational numbers as the field of fractions of the integers. For rings that have
zero divisors, the construction is similar but requires more care.
Multiplicative set Localization is commonly done with respect to a
multiplicatively closed set (also called a
multiplicative set or a
multiplicative system) of elements of a ring , that is a subset of that is
closed under multiplication, and contains . The requirement that must be a multiplicative set is natural, since it implies that all denominators introduced by the localization belong to . The localization by a set that is not multiplicatively closed can also be defined, by taking as possible denominators all products of elements of . However, the same localization is obtained by using the multiplicatively closed set of all products of elements of . As this often makes reasoning and notation simpler, it is standard practice to consider only localizations by multiplicative sets. For example, the localization by a single element introduces fractions of the form \tfrac a s, but also products of such fractions, such as \tfrac {ab} {s^2}. So, the denominators will belong to the multiplicative set \{1, s, s^2, s^3,\ldots\} of the powers of . Therefore, one generally talks of "the localization by the powers of an element" rather than of "the localization by an element". The localization of a ring by a multiplicative set is generally denoted S^{-1}R, but other notations are commonly used in some special cases: if S= \{1, t, t^2,\ldots \} consists of the powers of a single element, S^{-1}R is often denoted R_t; if S=R\setminus \mathfrak p is the
complement of a
prime ideal \mathfrak p, then S^{-1}R is denoted R_\mathfrak p.
In the remainder of this article, only localizations by a multiplicative set are considered. Integral domains When the ring is an
integral domain and does not contain , the ring S^{-1}R is a subring of the
field of fractions of . As such, the localization of a domain is a domain. More precisely, it is the
subring of the field of fractions of , that consists of the fractions \tfrac a s such that s\in S. This is a subring since the sum \tfrac as + \tfrac bt = \tfrac {at+bs}{st}, and the product \tfrac as \, \tfrac bt = \tfrac {ab}{st} of two elements of S^{-1}R are in S^{-1}R. This results from the defining property of a multiplicative set, which implies also that 1=\tfrac 11\in S^{-1}R. In this case, is a subring of S^{-1}R. It is shown below that this is no longer true in general, typically when contains
zero divisors. For example, the
decimal fractions are the localization of the ring of integers by the multiplicative set of the powers of ten. In this case, S^{-1}R consists of the rational numbers that can be written as \tfrac n{10^k}, where is an integer, and is a nonnegative integer.
General construction In the general case, a problem arises with
zero divisors. Let be a multiplicative set in a commutative ring . Suppose that s\in S, and 0\ne a\in R is a zero divisor with as=0. Then \tfrac a1 is the image in S^{-1}R of a\in R, and one has \tfrac a1 = \tfrac {as}s = \tfrac 0s = \tfrac 01. Thus some nonzero elements of must be zero in S^{-1}R. The construction that follows is designed for taking this into account. Given and as above, one considers the
equivalence relation on R\times S that is defined by (r_1, s_1) \sim (r_2, s_2) if there exists a t\in S such that t(s_1r_2-s_2r_1)=0. The localization S^{-1}R is defined as the set of the
equivalence classes for this relation. The class of is denoted as \frac rs, r/s, or s^{-1}r. So, one has \tfrac{r_1}{s_1}=\tfrac{r_2}{s_2} if and only if there is a t\in S such that t(s_1r_2-s_2r_1)=0. The reason for the t is to handle cases such as the above \tfrac a1 = \tfrac 01, where s_1r_2-s_2r_1 is nonzero even though the fractions should be regarded as equal. The localization S^{-1}R is a commutative ring with addition :\frac {r_1}{s_1}+\frac {r_2}{s_2} = \frac{r_1s_2+r_2s_1}{s_1s_2}, multiplication :\frac {r_1}{s_1}\,\frac {r_2}{s_2} = \frac{r_1r_2}{s_1s_2},
additive identity \tfrac 01, and
multiplicative identity \tfrac 11. The
function :j:r\mapsto \frac r1 defines a
ring homomorphism from R into S^{-1}R, which is
injective if and only if does not contain any zero divisors. If 0\in S, then S^{-1}R is the
zero ring that has only one unique element . If is the set of all
regular elements of (that is the elements that are not zero divisors), S^{-1}R is called the
total ring of fractions of .
Universal property The (above defined) ring homomorphism j\colon R\to S^{-1}R satisfies a
universal property that is described below. This characterizes S^{-1}R up to an
isomorphism. So all properties of localizations can be deduced from the universal property, independently from the way they have been constructed. Moreover, many important properties of localization are easily deduced from the general properties of universal properties, while their direct proof may be more technical. The universal property satisfied by j\colon R\to S^{-1}R is the following: :If f\colon R\to T is a ring homomorphism that maps every element of to a
unit (invertible element) in , there exists a unique ring homomorphism g\colon S^{-1}R\to T such that f=g\circ j. Using
category theory, this can be expressed by saying that localization is a
functor that is
left adjoint to a
forgetful functor. More precisely, let \mathcal C and \mathcal D be the categories whose objects are
pairs of a commutative ring and a
submonoid of, respectively, the multiplicative
monoid or the
group of units of the ring. The
morphisms of these categories are the ring homomorphisms that map the submonoid of the first object into the submonoid of the second one. Finally, let \mathcal F\colon \mathcal D \to \mathcal C be the forgetful functor that forgets that the elements of the second element of the pair are invertible. Then the factorization f=g\circ j of the universal property defines a bijection :\hom_\mathcal C((R,S), \mathcal F(T,U))\to \hom_\mathcal D ((S^{-1}R, j(S)), (T,U)). This may seem a rather tricky way of expressing the universal property, but it is useful for showing easily many properties, by using the fact that the composition of two left
adjoint functors is a left adjoint functor.
Examples • If R=\Z is the ring of
integers, and S=\Z\setminus \{0\}, then S^{-1}R is the field \Q of the
rational numbers. • If is an
integral domain, and S=R\setminus \{0\}, then S^{-1}R is the
field of fractions of . The preceding example is a special case of this one. • If is a
commutative ring, and if is the subset of its elements that are not
zero divisors, then S^{-1}R is the
total ring of fractions of . In this case, is the largest multiplicative set such that the homomorphism R\to S^{-1}R is injective. The preceding example is a special case of this one. • If x is an element of a commutative ring and S=\{1, x, x^2, \ldots\}, then S^{-1}R can be identified (is
canonically isomorphic to) R[x^{-1}]=R[s]/(xs-1). (The proof consists of showing that this ring satisfies the above universal property.) The ring S^{-1}R is generally denoted R_x. This sort of localization plays a fundamental role in the definition of an
affine scheme. • If \mathfrak p is a
prime ideal of a commutative ring , the
set complement S=R\setminus \mathfrak p of \mathfrak p in is a multiplicative set (by the definition of a prime ideal). The ring S^{-1}R is a
local ring that is generally denoted R_\mathfrak p, and called
the local ring of at \mathfrak p. This sort of localization is fundamental in
commutative algebra, because many properties of a commutative ring can be read on its local rings. Such a property is often called a
local property. For example, a ring is
regular if and only if all its local rings are regular.
Ring properties Localization is a rich construction that has many useful properties. In this section, only the properties relative to rings and to a single localization are considered. Properties concerning
ideals,
modules, or several multiplicative sets are considered in other sections. • S^{-1}R = 0
if and only if S contains 0. • The
ring homomorphism R\to S^{-1}R is injective if and only if S does not contain any
zero divisors. • The ring homomorphism R\to S^{-1}R is an
epimorphism in the
category of rings, that is not
surjective in general. • The ring S^{-1}R is a
flat -module (see for details). • The ideals of S^{-1}R are the
extensions of ideals of R by j:R \to S^{-1}R, r\mapsto r/1; that is, for an ideal I of R, j(I)(S^{-1}R) = \{r/s\in S^{-1}R: r\in I\} is an ideal of S^{-1}R and is often denoted I(S^{-1}R) or S^{-1}I (this notation comes from equivalently regarding this ideal as the localization of I as an R-module by S, see
below); the ideal is a proper ideal if and only if I\cap S =\emptyset. • If S=R\setminus \mathfrak p is the
complement of a prime ideal \mathfrak p of R, then S^{-1} R, denoted R_\mathfrak p, is a
local ring; that is, it has only one
maximal ideal, \mathfrak{p}R_\mathfrak{p} (i.e., the extension of \mathfrak{p} by j:R \to S^{-1}R \ (= R_\mathfrak{p}) defined above, sometimes denoted \mathfrak{p}_\mathfrak{p}), and \kappa(\mathfrak{p})=R_\mathfrak{p}/\mathfrak{p}R_\mathfrak{p} is the
residue field of
R at \mathfrak{p}. • Localization commutes with formations of finite sums, products, intersections and radicals; e.g., if \sqrt{I} denote the
radical of an ideal I in R, then ::\sqrt{I} \cdot S^{-1}R = \sqrt{I \cdot S^{-1}R}\,. :In particular, R is
reduced if and only if its total ring of fractions is reduced. • Localization commutes with taking quotients; that is, if
I is an ideal of
R, then S^{-1}R/S^{-1}I \cong {\overline{S}}^{-1}(R/I), where \overline{S} is the image of
S in R/I. • Let R be an integral domain with the field of fractions K. Then its localization R_\mathfrak{p} at a prime ideal \mathfrak{p} can be viewed as a subring of K. Moreover, ::R = \bigcap_\mathfrak{p} R_\mathfrak{p} = \bigcap_\mathfrak{m} R_\mathfrak{m} :where the first intersection is over all prime ideals and the second over the maximal ideals. • There is a
bijection between the set of prime ideals of S^{-1}R and the set of prime ideals of R that are
disjoint from S. This bijection is induced by the given homomorphism R\to S^{-1}R.
Saturation of a multiplicative set Let S \subseteq R be a multiplicative set. The
saturation \hat{S} of S is the set :\hat{S} = \{ r \in R \colon \exists s \in R, rs \in S \}. The multiplicative set is
saturated if it equals its saturation, that is, if \hat{S}=S, or equivalently, if rs \in S implies that and are in . If is not saturated, and rs \in S, then \frac s{rs} is a
multiplicative inverse of the image of in S^{-1}R. So, the images of the elements of \hat S are all invertible in S^{-1}R, and the universal property implies that S^{-1}R and \hat {S}{}^{-1}R are
canonically isomorphic, that is, there is a unique isomorphism between them that fixes the images of the elements of . If and are two multiplicative sets, then S^{-1}R and T^{-1}R are isomorphic if and only if they have the same saturation, or, equivalently, if belongs to one of the multiplicative sets, then there exists t\in R such that belongs to the other. Saturated multiplicative sets are not widely used explicitly, since, for verifying that a set is saturated, one must know
all units of the ring. == Terminology explained by the context ==