Integral domain

From Commalg
Revision as of 09:15, 7 August 2007 by Vipul (talk | contribs)

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

Definition

Symbol-free definition

A commutative unital ring is termed an integral domain if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:

  • It is cancellative
  • The zero ideal is a prime ideal
  • The product of nonzero elements in nonzero

Definition with symbols

A commutative unital ring R is termed an integral domain if R satisfies the following equivalent conditions:

  • Whenever ab=ac and a is not zero, b=c
  • The ideal 0 is a prime ideal
  • Whenever ab=0, either a=0 or b=0

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

Particular kinds of integral domains

Refer Category: Properties of integral domains

Weaker properties