Maple Professionel
Maple Académique
Maple Edition Étudiant
Maple Personal Edition
Maple Player
Maple Player for iPad
MapleSim Professionel
MapleSim Académique
Maple T.A. - Suite d'examens de classement
Maple T.A. MAA Placement Test Suite
Möbius - Didacticiels de mathématiques en ligne
Machine Design / Industrial Automation
Aéronautique
Ingénierie des véhicules
Robotics
Energie
System Simulation and Analysis
Model development for HIL
Modélisation du procédé pour la conception de systèmes de contrôle
Robotics/Motion Control/Mechatronics
Other Application Areas
Enseignement des mathématiques
Enseignement de l’ingénierie
Enseignement secondaire et supérieur (CPGE, BTS)
Tests et évaluations
Etudiants
Modélisation financière
Recherche opérationnelle
Calcul haute performance
Physique
Webinaires en direct
Webinaires enregistrés
Agenda des évènements
Forum MaplePrimes
Blog Maplesoft
Membres Maplesoft
Maple Ambassador Program
MapleCloud
Livres blancs techniques
Bulletin électronique
Livres Maple
Math Matters
Portail des applications
Galerie de modèles MapleSim
Cas d'Etudes Utilisateur
Exploring Engineering Fundamentals
Concepts d’enseignement avec Maple
Centre d’accueil utilisateur Maplesoft
Centre de ressources pour enseignants
Centre d’assistance aux étudiants
PolynomialIdeals[ZeroDimensionalDecomposition] - decompose an ideal into zero-dimensional ideals
Calling Sequence
ZeroDimensionalDecomposition(J)
Parameters
J
-
polynomial ideal
Description
The ZeroDimensionalDecomposition command computes a sequence of zero-dimensional ideals, some of which may lie in extended polynomial rings. That is, to make the resulting ideals zero-dimensional, ring variables can be moved into the coefficient field. If the ideals in the resulting sequence are contracted back to the original ring and intersected, you get the original ideal. In general, this decomposition is not unique.
This command allows you to run algorithms for zero-dimensional ideals on ideals of positive Hilbert dimension. Be aware that some algorithms do not interact well with the extension and contraction process. In particular, you cannot use this process to directly test whether an ideal is radical because the decomposition of a radical ideal may contain non-radical components that vanish under contraction and intersection. Valid applications include solving, testing whether an ideal is prime or primary, and computing prime or primary decompositions or radical of an ideal.
Examples
See Also
map, op, PolynomialIdeals, PolynomialIdeals[Contract], PolynomialIdeals[IdealContainment], PolynomialIdeals[Intersect], PolynomialIdeals[IsRadical], PolynomialIdeals[Radical], PolynomialIdeals[Simplify]
References
Becker, T., and Weispfenning, V. Groebner Bases. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1993.
Download Help Document