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Hereditary atomicity in integral domains
Institution:1. School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, United States of America;2. Department of Mathematics, MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139, United States of America;3. Department of Mathematics, Northeastern State University, Tahlequah, OK 74464, United States of America;1. Institute of Mathematics and Scientific Computing, University of Graz, Heinrichstr. 36 8010 Graz, Austria;2. Department of Mathematics, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA;1. School of Mathematics, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland;2. Hamilton Mathematics Institute, Ireland
Abstract:If every subring of an integral domain is atomic, we say that the latter is hereditarily atomic. In this paper, we study hereditarily atomic domains. First, we characterize when certain direct limits of Dedekind domains are Dedekind domains in terms of atomic overrings. Then we use this characterization to determine the fields that are hereditarily atomic. On the other hand, we investigate hereditary atomicity in the context of rings of polynomials and rings of Laurent polynomials, characterizing the fields and rings whose rings of polynomials and rings of Laurent polynomials, respectively, are hereditarily atomic. As a result, we obtain two classes of hereditarily atomic domains that cannot be embedded into any hereditarily atomic field. By contrast, we show that rings of power series are never hereditarily atomic. Finally, we make some progress on the still open question of whether every subring of a hereditarily atomic domain satisfies ACCP.
Keywords:Atomic domain  Hereditary atomicity  Hereditarily atomic field  Almost Dedekind domain  Dedekind domain  Prüfer domain
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