Prime ideal: Difference between revisions

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{{quotient is a|integral domain}}
==Definition for commutative rings==
==Definition for commutative rings==



Revision as of 09:05, 7 August 2007

This article defines a property of an ideal in a commutative unital ring

This property of an ideal in a ring is equivalent to the property of the quotient ring being a/an: integral domain | View other quotient-determined properties of ideals in commutative unital rings

Definition for commutative rings

Symbol-free definition

An ideal in a commutative unital ring (or in any commutative ring) is termed a prime ideal if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:

  • Whenever the product of two elements in the ring lies inside that ideal, at least one of the elements must lie inside that ideal.
  • It is an ideal whose complement is a saturated subset (that is, is clsoed with respect to the operation of multiplication).
  • The quotient ring by that ideal is an integral domain

Definition with symbols

An ideal in a commutative unital ring is termed a prime ideal if whenever are such that then either or .

Definition for non-commutative rings

The definition has many different forms for noncommutative rings: