Deviation of a local ring

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In commutative algebra, the deviations of a local ring R are certain invariants εi(R) that measure how far the ring is from being regular.

Definition

The deviations εn of a local ring R with residue field k are non-negative integers defined in terms of its Poincaré series P(t) by

[math]\displaystyle{ P(t)=\sum_{n\ge 0}t^n \operatorname{Tor}^R_n(k,k) = \prod_{n\ge 0} \frac{(1+t^{2n+1})^{\varepsilon_{2n}}}{(1-t^{2n+2})^{\varepsilon_{2n+1}}}. }[/math]

The zeroth deviation ε0 is the embedding dimension of R (the dimension of its tangent space). The first deviation ε1 vanishes exactly when the ring R is a regular local ring, in which case all the higher deviations also vanish. The second deviation ε2 vanishes exactly when the ring R is a complete intersection ring, in which case all the higher deviations vanish.

References