How is $\frac{F[x]}{(x^n)}$ a local ring?
I was trying to show the elements which are not units are nilpotent. But not being able to prove it properly. Please give some hint.
How is $\frac{F[x]}{(x^n)}$ a local ring?
I was trying to show the elements which are not units are nilpotent. But not being able to prove it properly. Please give some hint.
More generally, if you take any maximal ideal $M$ in a commutative ring $R$, $R/M^k$ is local for any positive integer $k$.
A maximal ideal of $R/M^k$ would have to be of the form $A/M^k$ where $A$ is a maximal ideal of $R$ containing $M^k$, by ideal correspondence.
But since $A$ is maximal it is prime, so $M^k\subseteq A$ would imply $M\subseteq A$. But then by maximality of $M$, $M=A$.
In your case, $M=(x)$.
The maximal ideal is $(x)$. An element not in $(x)$ has the form $a-xg(x)$ where $a$ is a nonzero element of $F$. It has the inverse $\sum_{k=0}^{n-1}a^{-k-1}x^kg(x)^k$. As all elements outside $(x)$ are invertible, the ring is local.
I guess you are assuming $F$ being a field.
So let $F$ be a field. Let $\mathfrak m$ denote the ideal generated by $x$ in $A:=F[x]/(x^n)$.
Let us prove that $\mathfrak m$ is the maximal ideal of $F[x]/(x^n)$. I propose a constructive trick. Notice that the elements of $A\setminus \mathfrak m$ are of the form $k + xf$ where $k\in F^\times$, $f\in A$. Thus $k + fx$ is invertible if and only if $1+xf/k$ is invertible.
For simplicity let us invert $1-x$. Consider the sequence defined by $$ a_1=1 - x $$ and $$ a_{m+1} = \left(1+x^{2^{m-1}}\right)a_m. $$
Hence $$ a_2 = (1-x)(1+x) = 1-x^2, $$ $$ a_3 = (1-x)(1+x)(1+x^2)= 1-x^4, $$ $$ a_{m} = (1-x) (1+x)\cdots (1+x^{2^{m-2}}) = 1-x^{2^{m-1}} $$ are multiples of $1-x$. Since $x^t=0$ in $K[x]/(x^n)$ for every $t\geq n$ one has that $a_m=1$ for $m$ large enough. Thus the inverse of $1-x$ in $K[x]/(x^n)$ is $$ (1+x) \cdots (1+x^{2^{m-1}}) $$ for $m$ large enough ($m$ large so that $2^{m-1} \geq n$).
The case $1-x f$ follows similarly.
This is proves a general property of nilpotent elements. If $\alpha$ is a nilpotent element in a ring $A$ then $1 + \alpha$ is a unit in $A$.
Hint: The non-units form an ideal.
$f(x)+I$ is invertible when there exists $g(x)+I$ such that $f(x)g(x)-1\in I$. This implies $f(x)g(x)+h(x)x^n=1$ and hence $(f,x^n)=1$.
Hence an element $f(x)+I$ is non-unit whenever $(f,x^n)\neq 1$ and hence it must be the case that $x|f(x)$ and now it should be clear that the set of non-units forms an ideal.