Lemma 10.103.11. Suppose $R$ is a Noetherian local ring. Let $M$ be a Cohen-Macaulay module over $R$. For any prime $\mathfrak p \subset R$ the module $M_{\mathfrak p}$ is Cohen-Macaulay over $R_\mathfrak p$.
Proof. We may and do assume $\mathfrak p \not= \mathfrak m$ and $M$ not zero. Choose a maximal chain of primes $\mathfrak p = \mathfrak p_ c \subset \mathfrak p_{c - 1} \subset \ldots \subset \mathfrak p_1 \subset \mathfrak m$. If we prove the result for $M_{\mathfrak p_1}$ over $R_{\mathfrak p_1}$, then the lemma will follow by induction on $c$. Thus we may assume that there is no prime strictly between $\mathfrak p$ and $\mathfrak m$. Note that $\dim (\text{Supp}(M_\mathfrak p)) \leq \dim (\text{Supp}(M)) - 1$ because any chain of primes in the support of $M_\mathfrak p$ can be extended by one more prime (namely $\mathfrak m$) in the support of $M$. On the other hand, we have $\text{depth}(M_\mathfrak p) \geq \text{depth}(M) - \dim (R/\mathfrak p) = \text{depth}(M) - 1$ by Lemma 10.72.10 and our choice of $\mathfrak p$. Thus $\text{depth}(M_\mathfrak p) \geq \dim (\text{Supp}(M_\mathfrak p))$ as desired (the other inequality is Lemma 10.72.3). $\square$
Post a comment
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked.
In your comment you can use Markdown and LaTeX style mathematics (enclose it like $\pi$
). A preview option is available if you wish to see how it works out (just click on the eye in the toolbar).
All contributions are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Comments (2)
Comment #6601 by WhatJiaranEatsTonight on
Comment #6847 by Johan on
There are also: