This is a collection of examples in math I find noteworthy or in some other way interesting. I will try to make them more or less user-friendly, and to include references to my notes whenever possible, but I offer you no promises.
The Union of the Axiis Is Singular
Recall that, as a scheme, we can write the union of the axiis as . Consider the local ring , a local ring with maximal ideal . Consider . Note that is generated by and , but , so . Then . Suppose . We have a nontrivial prime ideal, so the dimension must be positive; thus there must be some tower of prime ideals . Elements of are of the form for and (if had any factor it would vanish, and conversely for ). Consider an ideal which contains for both and nonzero; quotienting by such an ideal would yield as . Thus such an ideal cannot be prime. No prime ideal can thus contain for nonzero; moreover, if an ideal contains and it must contain by closure, so each ideal must contain only multiples of or multiples of . Moreover, it is clear that for the ideal to be prime, and so any prime ideal in is of the form or . These ideals don’t contain each other, and so we have found the dimension of is 1.