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arxiv: 1906.12067 · v1 · pith:SBBSDVY3new · submitted 2019-06-28 · 🧮 math.AC

Valuative dimension and monomial orders

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 13:46 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AC
keywords valuative dimensionmonomial ordersgraded lexicographic orderKrull dimensionconstructive characterizationcommutative ringsrational monomial order
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The pith

Valuative dimension of a ring admits a constructive characterization via graded rational monomial orders.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper provides a constructive test for the valuative dimension that mirrors Lombardi's test for Krull dimension but relies on graded reverse lexicographic monomial orders rather than plain lexicographic ones. A sympathetic reader would care because this supplies an algorithmic way to determine a dimension concept that refines the usual Krull dimension in the presence of valuations. The result applies to rings that support such monomial orders and includes some examples to illustrate the ideas. If the characterization holds, it extends constructive methods in commutative algebra to this valuative setting.

Core claim

The valuative dimension equals the maximum length of chains or sequences detected by the graded reverse lexicographic monomial order, or more generally by any graded rational monomial order, giving a direct constructive analogue to the known lex-order characterization of Krull dimension.

What carries the argument

Graded rational monomial order, which replaces the lexicographic order in the test for dimension and allows the constructive verification of valuative dimension.

If this is right

  • The valuative dimension becomes computable for polynomial rings and similar structures using standard monomial order algorithms.
  • Related results in the paper connect this to other dimension notions in algebra.
  • Examples demonstrate cases where the order detects the dimension correctly.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • This approach may extend to other non-Noetherian rings if they admit suitable orders.
  • Computational algebra systems could implement this test for practical dimension calculations.
  • Connections to valuation theory might be strengthened by this explicit order-based description.

Load-bearing premise

The rings under consideration admit a graded rational monomial order for which the stated constructive test correctly captures the valuative dimension.

What would settle it

A specific ring and monomial order where the maximum chain length under the order differs from the independently computed valuative dimension of the ring.

read the original abstract

The main result from this note provides a constructive characterization of the valuative dimension, which bears a strong analogy to Lombardi's constructive characterization of the Krull dimension. While Lombardi's characterization uses the lexicographic monomial order, ours uses the graded (reverse) lexicographic order or, in fact, any graded rational monomial order. Apart from this, the paper contains some related results and some examples which readers may find illuminating.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper provides a constructive characterization of the valuative dimension of a commutative ring, analogous to Lombardi's characterization of Krull dimension. While Lombardi's result relies on the lexicographic monomial order, the main theorem here uses the graded (reverse) lexicographic order or, more generally, any graded rational monomial order. The note also contains related results and illustrative examples.

Significance. If the main characterization holds, it supplies a new constructive test for valuative dimension that is directly computable via standard monomial-order machinery. This extends the scope of effective dimension theory in commutative algebra and may facilitate algorithmic applications in rings admitting suitable gradings. The analogy to Lombardi's result is a clear strength, as is the claim that the result works for any graded rational monomial order.

minor comments (2)
  1. The abstract refers to 'the main result' and 'related results' without indicating section numbers; the manuscript should explicitly label the statement of the central theorem (e.g., Theorem 3.2 or similar) so readers can locate the precise claim immediately.
  2. Examples are mentioned but not described; a brief indication of the rings or monomial orders used in the examples would help assess the scope of the result.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive summary of the manuscript and for recommending minor revision. The report correctly identifies the main result as a constructive characterization of valuative dimension via graded (reverse) lexicographic or any graded rational monomial order, in direct analogy to Lombardi's theorem for Krull dimension. No specific major comments were raised.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The abstract frames the main result as a constructive characterization of valuative dimension that is explicitly analogous to an external result (Lombardi's characterization of Krull dimension) rather than derived from the paper's own inputs or prior self-citations. No equations, definitions, or load-bearing steps are supplied in the available text that would reduce a prediction or uniqueness claim to a fitted parameter or self-referential definition. The derivation is presented as building on independent prior work, making the paper self-contained against external benchmarks with no detectable circular reduction.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract only; no explicit free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are stated.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5582 in / 934 out tokens · 30822 ms · 2026-05-25T13:46:27.928431+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

9 extracted references · 9 canonical work pages

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    Pure Appl

    Thierry Coquand, Space of valuations , Ann. Pure Appl. Logic 157 (2009), 97–109

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    Robert Gilmer, Multiplicative Ideal Theory, Marcel Dek ker Inc., New York, 1972

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    Paul Jaffard, Th´ eorie de la dimension dans les anneaux de polynomes, M´ emor. Sci. Math., Fasc. 146, Gauthier-Villars, Paris 1960

  4. [4]

    Gregor Kemper, A Course in Commutative Algebra, Springe r-Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg 2011

  5. [5]

    Algebra 399 (2014), 782–800

    Gregor Kemper, Ngo Viet Trung, Krull dimension and monomial orders , J. Algebra 399 (2014), 782–800

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    Gregor Kemper, Ngo Viet Trung, Nguyen Thi Van Anh, Toward a theory of monomial preorders , Math. Comp. 87 (2018), 2513-2537

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    Henri Lombardi, Dimension de Krull, Nullstellens¨ atze et ´ evaluation dynamique, Math. Z. 242 (2002), 23–46

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    Finite projective modules, Algebra and Applications, 20, Springer, Dordrecht 2015

    Henri Lombardi, Claude Quitt´ e, Commutative algebra: c onstructive methods. Finite projective modules, Algebra and Applications, 20, Springer, Dordrecht 2015

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    Technische Universi ¨at M ¨unchen, Zentrum Mathematik - M11, Boltzmannstr

    Hideyuki Matsumura, Commutative Ring Theory, Cambridg e University Press, Cambridge 1986. Technische Universi ¨at M ¨unchen, Zentrum Mathematik - M11, Boltzmannstr. 3, 85748 Ga rching, Ger- many E-mail address : kemper@ma.tum.de Department of Mathematics, F aculty of Sciences of Sfax, Uni versity of Sfax, 3000 Sfax, Tunisia E-mail address : ihsen.yengui@f...