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Additive subgroup of a mathematical ring that absorbs multiplication From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematics, and more specifically in ring theory, an ideal of a ring is a special subset of its elements. Ideals generalize certain subsets of the integers, such as the even numbers or the multiples of 3. Addition and subtraction of even numbers preserves evenness, and multiplying an even number by any integer (even or odd) results in an even number; these closure and absorption properties are the defining properties of an ideal. An ideal can be used to construct a quotient ring in a way similar to how, in group theory, a normal subgroup can be used to construct a quotient group.
Among the integers, the ideals correspond one-for-one with the non-negative integers: in this ring, every ideal is a principal ideal consisting of the multiples of a single non-negative number. However, in other rings, the ideals may not correspond directly to the ring elements, and certain properties of integers, when generalized to rings, attach more naturally to the ideals than to the elements of the ring. For instance, the prime ideals of a ring are analogous to prime numbers, and the Chinese remainder theorem can be generalized to ideals. There is a version of unique prime factorization for the ideals of a Dedekind domain (a type of ring important in number theory).
The related, but distinct, concept of an ideal in order theory is derived from the notion of ideal in ring theory. A fractional ideal is a generalization of an ideal, and the usual ideals are sometimes called integral ideals for clarity.
Ernst Kummer invented the concept of ideal numbers to serve as the "missing" factors in number rings in which unique factorization fails; here the word "ideal" is in the sense of existing in imagination only, in analogy with "ideal" objects in geometry such as points at infinity.[1] In 1876, Richard Dedekind replaced Kummer's undefined concept by concrete sets of numbers, sets that he called ideals, in the third edition of Dirichlet's book Vorlesungen über Zahlentheorie, to which Dedekind had added many supplements.[1][2][3] Later the notion was extended beyond number rings to the setting of polynomial rings and other commutative rings by David Hilbert and especially Emmy Noether.
Given a ring R, a left ideal is a subset I of R that is a subgroup of the additive group of that "absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of "; that is, is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions:
In other words, a left ideal is a left submodule of R, considered as a left module over itself.[5]
A right ideal is defined similarly, with the condition replaced by . A two-sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal.
If the ring is commutative, the three definitions are the same, and one talks simply of an ideal. In the non-commutative case, "ideal" is often used instead of "two-sided ideal".
If I is a left, right or two-sided ideal, the relation if and only if
is an equivalence relation on R, and the set of equivalence classes forms a left, right or bi module denoted and called the quotient of R by I.[6] (It is an instance of a congruence relation and is a generalization of modular arithmetic.)
If the ideal I is two-sided, is a ring,[7] and the function
that associates to each element of R its equivalence class is a surjective ring homomorphism that has the ideal as its kernel.[8] Conversely, the kernel of a ring homomorphism is a two-sided ideal. Therefore, the two-sided ideals are exactly the kernels of ring homomorphisms.
By convention, a ring has the multiplicative identity. But some authors do not require a ring to have the multiplicative identity; i.e., for them, a ring is a rng. For a rng R, a left ideal I is a subrng with the additional property that is in I for every and every . (Right and two-sided ideals are defined similarly.) For a ring, an ideal I (say a left ideal) is rarely a subring; since a subring shares the same multiplicative identity with the ambient ring R, if I were a subring, for every , we have i.e., .
The notion of an ideal does not involve associativity; thus, an ideal is also defined for non-associative rings (often without the multiplicative identity) such as a Lie algebra.
(For the sake of brevity, some results are stated only for left ideals but are usually also true for right ideals with appropriate notation changes.)
To simplify the description all rings are assumed to be commutative. The non-commutative case is discussed in detail in the respective articles.
Ideals are important because they appear as kernels of ring homomorphisms and allow one to define factor rings. Different types of ideals are studied because they can be used to construct different types of factor rings.
Two other important terms using "ideal" are not always ideals of their ring. See their respective articles for details:
The sum and product of ideals are defined as follows. For and , left (resp. right) ideals of a ring R, their sum is
which is a left (resp. right) ideal, and, if are two-sided,
i.e. the product is the ideal generated by all products of the form ab with a in and b in .
Note is the smallest left (resp. right) ideal containing both and (or the union ), while the product is contained in the intersection of and .
The distributive law holds for two-sided ideals ,
If a product is replaced by an intersection, a partial distributive law holds:
where the equality holds if contains or .
Remark: The sum and the intersection of ideals is again an ideal; with these two operations as join and meet, the set of all ideals of a given ring forms a complete modular lattice. The lattice is not, in general, a distributive lattice. The three operations of intersection, sum (or join), and product make the set of ideals of a commutative ring into a quantale.
If are ideals of a commutative ring R, then in the following two cases (at least)
(More generally, the difference between a product and an intersection of ideals is measured by the Tor functor: .[17])
An integral domain is called a Dedekind domain if for each pair of ideals , there is an ideal such that .[18] It can then be shown that every nonzero ideal of a Dedekind domain can be uniquely written as a product of maximal ideals, a generalization of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic.
In we have
since is the set of integers that are divisible by both and .
Let and let . Then,
In the first computation, we see the general pattern for taking the sum of two finitely generated ideals, it is the ideal generated by the union of their generators. In the last three we observe that products and intersections agree whenever the two ideals intersect in the zero ideal. These computations can be checked using Macaulay2.[19][20][21]
Ideals appear naturally in the study of modules, especially in the form of a radical.
Let R be a commutative ring. By definition, a primitive ideal of R is the annihilator of a (nonzero) simple R-module. The Jacobson radical of R is the intersection of all primitive ideals. Equivalently,
Indeed, if is a simple module and x is a nonzero element in M, then and , meaning is a maximal ideal. Conversely, if is a maximal ideal, then is the annihilator of the simple R-module . There is also another characterization (the proof is not hard):
For a not-necessarily-commutative ring, it is a general fact that is a unit element if and only if is (see the link) and so this last characterization shows that the radical can be defined both in terms of left and right primitive ideals.
The following simple but important fact (Nakayama's lemma) is built-in to the definition of a Jacobson radical: if M is a module such that , then M does not admit a maximal submodule, since if there is a maximal submodule , and so , a contradiction. Since a nonzero finitely generated module admits a maximal submodule, in particular, one has:
A maximal ideal is a prime ideal and so one has
where the intersection on the left is called the nilradical of R. As it turns out, is also the set of nilpotent elements of R.
If R is an Artinian ring, then is nilpotent and . (Proof: first note the DCC implies for some n. If (DCC) is an ideal properly minimal over the latter, then . That is, , a contradiction.)
Let A and B be two commutative rings, and let f : A → B be a ring homomorphism. If is an ideal in A, then need not be an ideal in B (e.g. take f to be the inclusion of the ring of integers Z into the field of rationals Q). The extension of in B is defined to be the ideal in B generated by . Explicitly,
If is an ideal of B, then is always an ideal of A, called the contraction of to A.
Assuming f : A → B is a ring homomorphism, is an ideal in A, is an ideal in B, then:
It is false, in general, that being prime (or maximal) in A implies that is prime (or maximal) in B. Many classic examples of this stem from algebraic number theory. For example, embedding . In , the element 2 factors as where (one can show) neither of are units in B. So is not prime in B (and therefore not maximal, as well). Indeed, shows that , , and therefore .
On the other hand, if f is surjective and then:
Remark: Let K be a field extension of L, and let B and A be the rings of integers of K and L, respectively. Then B is an integral extension of A, and we let f be the inclusion map from A to B. The behaviour of a prime ideal of A under extension is one of the central problems of algebraic number theory.
The following is sometimes useful:[22] a prime ideal is a contraction of a prime ideal if and only if . (Proof: Assuming the latter, note intersects , a contradiction. Now, the prime ideals of correspond to those in B that are disjoint from . Hence, there is a prime ideal of B, disjoint from , such that is a maximal ideal containing . One then checks that lies over . The converse is obvious.)
Ideals can be generalized to any monoid object , where is the object where the monoid structure has been forgotten. A left ideal of is a subobject that "absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of "; that is, is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions:
A right ideal is defined with the condition "" replaced by "'". A two-sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal, and is sometimes simply called an ideal. When is a commutative monoid object respectively, the definitions of left, right, and two-sided ideal coincide, and the term ideal is used alone.
An ideal can also be thought of as a specific type of R-module. If we consider as a left -module (by left multiplication), then a left ideal is really just a left sub-module of . In other words, is a left (right) ideal of if and only if it is a left (right) -module that is a subset of . is a two-sided ideal if it is a sub--bimodule of .
Example: If we let , an ideal of is an abelian group that is a subset of , i.e. for some . So these give all the ideals of .
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