Gordan's lemma is a lemma in convex geometry and algebraic geometry. It can be stated in several ways.

  • Let be a matrix of integers. Let be the set of non-negative integer solutions of . Then there exists a finite subset of vectors in , such that every element of is a linear combination of these vectors with non-negative integer coefficients.[1]
  • The semigroup of integral points in a rational convex polyhedral cone is finitely generated.[2]
  • An affine toric variety is an algebraic variety (this follows from the fact that the prime spectrum of the semigroup algebra of such a semigroup is, by definition, an affine toric variety).

The lemma is named after the mathematician Paul Gordan (1837–1912). Some authors have misspelled it as "Gordon's lemma".

Proofs edit

There are topological and algebraic proofs.

Topological proof edit

Let   be the dual cone of the given rational polyhedral cone. Let   be integral vectors so that   Then the  's generate the dual cone  ; indeed, writing C for the cone generated by  's, we have:  , which must be the equality. Now, if x is in the semigroup

 

then it can be written as

 

where   are nonnegative integers and  . But since x and the first sum on the right-hand side are integral, the second sum is a lattice point in a bounded region, and so there are only finitely many possibilities for the second sum (the topological reason). Hence,   is finitely generated.

Algebraic proof edit

The proof[3] is based on a fact that a semigroup S is finitely generated if and only if its semigroup algebra   is a finitely generated algebra over  . To prove Gordan's lemma, by induction (cf. the proof above), it is enough to prove the following statement: for any unital subsemigroup S of  ,

If S is finitely generated, then  , v an integral vector, is finitely generated.

Put  , which has a basis  . It has  -grading given by

 .

By assumption, A is finitely generated and thus is Noetherian. It follows from the algebraic lemma below that   is a finitely generated algebra over  . Now, the semigroup   is the image of S under a linear projection, thus finitely generated and so   is finitely generated. Hence,   is finitely generated then.

Lemma: Let A be a  -graded ring. If A is a Noetherian ring, then   is a finitely generated  -algebra.

Proof: Let I be the ideal of A generated by all homogeneous elements of A of positive degree. Since A is Noetherian, I is actually generated by finitely many  , homogeneous of positive degree. If f is homogeneous of positive degree, then we can write   with   homogeneous. If f has sufficiently large degree, then each   has degree positive and strictly less than that of f. Also, each degree piece   is a finitely generated  -module. (Proof: Let   be an increasing chain of finitely generated submodules of   with union  . Then the chain of the ideals   stabilizes in finite steps; so does the chain  ) Thus, by induction on degree, we see   is a finitely generated  -algebra.

Applications edit

A multi-hypergraph over a certain set   is a multiset of subsets of   (it is called "multi-hypergraph" since each hyperedge may appear more than once). A multi-hypergraph is called regular if all vertices have the same degree. It is called decomposable if it has a proper nonempty subset that is regular too. For any integer n, let   be the maximum degree of an indecomposable multi-hypergraph on n vertices. Gordan's lemma implies that   is finite.[1] Proof: for each subset S of vertices, define a variable xS (a non-negative integer). Define another variable d (a non-negative integer). Consider the following set of n equations (one equation per vertex):

 
Every solution (x,d) denotes a regular multi-hypergraphs on  , where x defines the hyperedges and d is the degree. By Gordan's lemma, the set of solutions is generated by a finite set of solutions, i.e., there is a finite set   of multi-hypergraphs, such that each regular multi-hypergraph is a linear combination of some elements of  . Every non-decomposable multi-hypergraph must be in   (since by definition, it cannot be generated by other multi-hypergraph). Hence, the set of non-decomposable multi-hypergraphs is finite.

See also edit

  • Birkhoff algorithm is an algorithm that, given a bistochastic matrix (a matrix which solves a particular set of equations), finds a decomposition of it into integral matrices. It is related to Gordan's lemma in that it shows that the set of these matrices is generated by a finite set of integral matrices.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Alon, N; Berman, K.A (1986-09-01). "Regular hypergraphs, Gordon's lemma, Steinitz' lemma and invariant theory". Journal of Combinatorial Theory, Series A. 43 (1): 91–97. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(86)90026-9. ISSN 0097-3165.
  2. ^ David A. Cox, Lectures on toric varieties. Lecture 1. Proposition 1.11.
  3. ^ Bruns, Winfried; Gubeladze, Joseph (2009). Polytopes, rings, and K-theory. Springer Monographs in Mathematics. Springer. doi:10.1007/b105283. ISBN 978-0-387-76355-2., Lemma 4.12.

See also edit