Integral domain: Difference between revisions
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* The zero ideal is a [[prime ideal]] | * The zero ideal is a [[prime ideal]] | ||
* It is a nonzero ring, and the product of nonzero elements in nonzero | * It is a nonzero ring, and the product of nonzero elements in nonzero | ||
* It is a nonzero ring, and the set of nonzero elements is a [[saturated subset]] | |||
===Definition with symbols=== | ===Definition with symbols=== | ||
Revision as of 22:24, 2 February 2008
This article defines a property of commutative unital rings; a property that can be evaluated for a commutative unital ring
View all properties of commutative unital rings
VIEW RELATED: Commutative unital ring property implications | Commutative unital ring property non-implications |Commutative unital ring metaproperty satisfactions | Commutative unital ring metaproperty dissatisfactions | Commutative unital ring property satisfactions | Commutative unital ring property dissatisfactions
The property of being an ideal for which the quotient ring has this property is: prime ideal
This article is about a basic definition in commutative algebra. View a complete list of basic definitions in commutative algebra
Definition
Symbol-free definition
A commutative unital ring is termed an integral domain if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:
- It is a nonzero ring, and is cancellative
- The zero ideal is a prime ideal
- It is a nonzero ring, and the product of nonzero elements in nonzero
- It is a nonzero ring, and the set of nonzero elements is a saturated subset
Definition with symbols
A commutative unital ring is termed an integral domain if satisfies the following equivalent conditions:
- Whenever and is not zero,
- The ideal is a prime ideal
- Whenever , either or
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
Particular kinds of integral domains
Refer Category: Properties of integral domains
Weaker properties
Metaproperties
Closure under taking the polynomial ring
This property of commutative unital rings is polynomial-closed: it is closed under the operation of taking the polynomial ring. In other words, if is a commutative unital ring satisfying the property, so is
View other polynomial-closed properties of commutative unital rings
The polynomial ring over an integral domain is again an integral domain.
Closure under taking subrings
Any subring of a commutative unital ring with this property, also has this property
View other subring-closed properties of commutative unital rings
Any subring of an integral domain is an integral domain. In fact, a commutative unital ring is an integral domain iff it occursas as a subring of a field.
Closure under taking quotients
This property of commutative unital rings is not quotient-closed: in other words, a quotient of a commutative unital ring with this property, need not have this property
A quotient of an integral domain by an ideal need not be an integral domain; to see this, note that the quotient by an ideal is an integral domain iff the ideal is a prime ideal. Thus, the quotient of by the non-prime ideal is not an integral domain.
Effect of property operators
The quotient-closure
Applying the quotient-closure to this property gives: commutative unital ring
Any commutative unital ring can be expressed as a quotient of an integral domain by an ideal. In fact, any commutative unital ring can be expressed as a quotient of a polynomial ring over integers (a free commutative unital ring) by a suitable ideal.