Commutative Algebra – Is a Ring of Integers Necessarily Noetherian?

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Let $K$ be an algebraic extension field (not necessarily finite) of $\mathbb{Q}$. Let $\mathscr{O}_K$ be the integral closure of $\mathbb{Z}$ in $K$.

Then, is $\mathscr{O}_K$ Noetherian?

If $K$ is a finite extension of $\mathbb{Q}$, then $\mathscr{O}_K$ can be shown to be Noetherian. However, if we do not assume that finiteness condition, is it still true?

(It can be shown that $\mathscr{O}_K$ is an integrally closed domain of Krull-dimension $1$. Hence, if it is Noetherian, it is a Dedekind domain.)

Best Answer

We can take $K = \bar{\mathbb Q}$, the algebraic closure of $\mathbb Q$. Then it is easy to see that every element of $\mathscr O_K$ admits a square root, hence $\mathscr O_K$ contains no irreducible elements. But any element in a Noetherian domain is a product of irreducibles.

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