Iwasawa algebra
In mathematics, the Iwasawa algebra Λ of a profinite group G is a variation of the group ring of G with p-adic coefficients that take the topology of G into account. More precisely, Λ is the inverse limit of the group rings Zp as H runs through the open normal subgroups of G. Commutative Iwasawa algebras were introduced by in his study of Zp extensions in Iwasawa theory, and non-commutative Iwasawa algebras of compact p-adic analytic groups were introduced by.
Iwasawa algebra of the ''p''-adic integers
In the special case when the profinite group G is isomorphic to the additive group of the ring of p-adic integers Zp, the Iwasawa algebra Λ is isomorphic to the ring of the formal power series ZpIt follows from the Weierstrass preparation theorem for formal power series over a complete local ring that the prime ideals of this ring are as follows:
- Height 0: the zero ideal.
- Height 1: the ideal, and the ideals generated by irreducible distinguished polynomials.
- Height 2: the maximal ideal.
Finitely generated modules
The rank of a finitely generated module is the number of times the module ZpMany of the modules over this algebra that occur in Iwasawa theory are finitely generated torsion modules. The structure of such modules can be described as follows. A quasi-isomorphism of modules is a homomorphism whose kernel and cokernel are both finite groups, in other words modules with support either empty or the height 2 prime ideal. For any finitely generated torsion module there is a quasi-isomorphism to a finite sum of modules of the form Zp
is a generator of a height 1 prime ideal. Moreover, the number of times any module Zp
The μ-invariant of a finitely-generated torsion module is the number of times the module Zp
where the fj are distinguished polynomials, then
and
In terms of the characteristic power series, the μ-invariant is the minimum of the valuations of the coefficients and the λ-invariant is the power of T at which that minimum first occurs.
If the rank, the μ-invariant, and the λ-invariant of a finitely generated module all vanish, the module is finite ; in other words its underlying abelian group is a finite abelian p-group. These are the finitely generated modules whose support has dimension at most 0. Such modules are Artinian and have a well defined length, which is finite and additive on short exact sequences.
Iwasawa's theorem
Write νn for the element 1+γ+γ2+...+γpn–1 where γ is a topological generator of Γ. showed that if X is a finitely generated torsion module over the Iwasawa algebra andX/νnX has order pen then
for n sufficiently large, where μ, λ, and c depend only on X and not on n. Iwasawa's original argument was ad hoc, and pointed out that the Iwasawa's result could be deduced from standard results about the structure of modules over integrally closed Noetherian rings such as the Iwasawa algebra.
In particular this applies to the case when en is the largest power of p dividing the order of the ideal class group of the cyclotomic field generated by the roots of unity of order pn+1. The Ferrero–Washington theorem states that μ=0 in this case.
Higher rank and non-commutative Iwasawa algebras
More general Iwasawa algebras are of the formwhere G is a compact p-adic Lie group. The case above corresponds to. A classification of modules over up to pseudo-isomorphism is possible in case
For non-commutative G, -modules are classified up to so-called pseudo-null modules.