Here are two examples of results which can be deduced from commutative algebra:
- Any $n\times n$ complex matrix is conjugate to a Jordan canonical matrix (can be proven using the structure theorem for modules over a PID, in this case $\mathbf{C}[T]$ - see for example these course notes).
- Commuting matrices have a common eigenvector (this can be seen as a consequence of Hilbert's Nullstellensatz, according to Wikipedia).
My question is, does anyone know of other examples of results in linear algebra which can be deduced (non-trivially*) from results in commutative algebra?
More precisely: Which results about modules over fields can be optained via modules over more general commutative rings? (Thanks to Martin's comment below for suggesting this precision of the question).
.* by "non-trivially," I mean you have to go deeper than simply applying module theory to modules over a field.
I think this is an interesting question, and I have several responses to it.
1$'$) To go deeper, how "linear algebraic" you feel this structure theorem is probably depends upon which proof you give. If you follow the route which first establishes Smith normal form for matrices over a PID, this is strongly reminiscent of undergraduate linear algebra. It seems though that the fashion in many contemporary texts is to give a less matrix-oriented approach. Very recently I realized that I had never really absorbed (and maybe was never taught) the linear algebra approach to structure theory and also that I needed it in some work I am doing in lattices and the geometry of numbers. Maybe a serious undergraduate algebra sequence should include treatment of the Hermite and Smith normal forms and applications to module theory rather than more abstract stuff which will surely be covered later on.
1$''$) One of the few commutative algebra texts I know that gives a proof of the structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a PID is mine. The proof I give is (I think) not one of the standard ones, so to me this is an example of a linear algebra result proved by commutative algebraic methods. At the moment the argument is scattered through various sections:
$\bullet$ In $\S 3.9.2$ it is shown that a finitely generated torsionfree module over a PID is free. Since free modules are projective, it follows that every finitely generated module over a PID is the direct sum of a free module and a torsion module, so it remains to classify finitely generated torsion modules.
$\bullet$ In $\S 17.5.3$ I give the structure theorem for finitely generated torsion modules over a discrete valuation ring, which takes advantage of the fact that its quotients are "self-injective rings".
$\bullet$ In $\S 20.6$ I explain how an easy localization argument reduces the case of finitely generated torsion modules over an arbitrary PID -- in fact over an arbitrary Dedekind domain -- to the already proved case of a DVR.
I am tempted to say that it often works like this: you can sometimes bring in commutative algebraic methods to prove linear algebraic results in nontrivial and interesting ways, but in most cases I know the standard linear algebraic methods are simpler and more efficient. One exception is that in proving polynomial identities (like the Cayley-Hamilton theorem) in linear algebra it is often useful to note that it is sufficient to show that the identity holds "generically", or even on a Zariski-dense subset of the appropriate vector space.