Difference between revisions of "Ring/New page"
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Giving us the following 4 types of elementary rings<ref group="Note">[[field]], [[integral domain]] are also all rings, there's like 6 kinds. We call "Elementary ring" just the ones listed</ref>: | Giving us the following 4 types of elementary rings<ref group="Note">[[field]], [[integral domain]] are also all rings, there's like 6 kinds. We call "Elementary ring" just the ones listed</ref>: | ||
# Ring - properties 1-7 | # Ring - properties 1-7 | ||
− | # Ring with unity ({{AKA}}: [[u-ring]]) - properties 1-8 | + | # {{anchor|unity/identity}}Ring with unity ({{AKA}}: [[u-ring]], ring with identity) - properties 1-8 |
# Commutative ring ({{AKA}}: [[c-ring]]) - properties 1-7 and 9 | # Commutative ring ({{AKA}}: [[c-ring]]) - properties 1-7 and 9 | ||
# Commutative ring with unity ({{AKA}}: [[cu-ring]] or [[q-ring]] - properties 1-9 | # Commutative ring with unity ({{AKA}}: [[cu-ring]] or [[q-ring]] - properties 1-9 | ||
+ | |||
===Caveats=== | ===Caveats=== | ||
Some authors define a ring to be what we would call a ''ring with unity'' (which we shall call a [[u-ring]] throughout the site). Especially if the book covers the topics of rings and [[module|modules]]. We defined "commutative ring" and "ring with unity" above. | Some authors define a ring to be what we would call a ''ring with unity'' (which we shall call a [[u-ring]] throughout the site). Especially if the book covers the topics of rings and [[module|modules]]. We defined "commutative ring" and "ring with unity" above. |
Latest revision as of 16:29, 19 October 2016
Not to be confused with a ring of sets
Contents
Definition
Let [ilmath]R[/ilmath] be a non-empty set, let there be two binary operations (a kind of map where rather than [ilmath]f(a,b)[/ilmath] we write [ilmath]afb[/ilmath]):
- [ilmath]\oplus:R\times R\rightarrow R[/ilmath] - called "addition", [ilmath]\oplus:(a,b)\mapsto a\oplus b[/ilmath]
- [ilmath]\odot:R\times R\rightarrow R[/ilmath] - called "multiplication", [ilmath]\odot:(a,b)\mapsto a\odot b[/ilmath]
and let there be elements [ilmath]0_R\in R[/ilmath] and [ilmath]1_R\in R[/ilmath] (not necessarily distinct)[Note 1] such that we have the following 7 properties[1]:
TODO: This would be much nicer as a table....
- [ilmath](R,\oplus,0_R)[/ilmath] is an abelian group
- Group definition:
- [ilmath]\forall a,b,c\in R[(a\oplus b)\oplus c=a\oplus(b\oplus c)][/ilmath] - associativity
- [ilmath]\exists e\in R\ \forall a\in R[e\oplus a=a\oplus e=a][/ilmath] - existence of identity, on the group page we show it is unique[Note 2], we denote it by [ilmath]0_R[/ilmath], so: [ilmath]\forall a\in R[a\oplus 0_R=0_R\oplus a=a][/ilmath]
- [ilmath]\forall a\in R\ \exists b\in R[a\oplus b=b\oplus a=0_R][/ilmath] - existence of inverse, on the group page we show it is unique[Note 3]. Denoted by [ilmath]-a[/ilmath] as we're using additive notation[Note 4]
- Being an Abelian group adds an additional property:
- [ilmath]\forall a,b\in R[a\oplus b=b\oplus a][/ilmath] - commutivity
- Group definition:
- [ilmath](R,\odot)[/ilmath] is a semigroup
- Semigroup definition:
- [ilmath]\forall a,b,c\in R[(a\odot b)\odot c=a\odot(b\odot c)][/ilmath]
- Semigroup definition:
- There is distributivity in play in.
- [ilmath]\odot[/ilmath] distributes across [ilmath]\oplus[/ilmath] Caution:I think... it might be the other way around... the following 2 rules are certainly correct however:
- [ilmath]\forall a,b,c\in R[a\odot(b\oplus c)=(a\odot b)\oplus(a\odot c)][/ilmath] and
- [ilmath]\forall a,b,c\in R[(a+b)c=ac+bc][/ilmath]
- [ilmath]\odot[/ilmath] distributes across [ilmath]\oplus[/ilmath] Caution:I think... it might be the other way around... the following 2 rules are certainly correct however:
Then [ilmath](R,\oplus:R\times R\rightarrow R,\odot:R\times R\rightarrow R,0_R)[/ilmath] is a ring, but as mathematicians are lazy we just write [ilmath](R,\oplus,\odot,0_R)[/ilmath], [ilmath](R,\oplus,\odot)[/ilmath] or even just "Let [ilmath]R[/ilmath] be a ring".
TODO: Be more formal about distributivity, I've checked my books, no one specified, they just say "it is distributive: "
Further properties of elementary rings
There are 2 more additional properties we can apply to define rings:
- [ilmath]\exists e_\odot\ \forall a\in R[a\odot e_\odot=e_\odot\odot a=a][/ilmath] - a multiplicative identity, this element if it exists is unique and denoted [ilmath]1_R[/ilmath] or just [ilmath]1[/ilmath]
- [ilmath]\forall a,b\in R[a\odot b=b\odot a][/ilmath] - commutative with respect to [ilmath]\odot[/ilmath]
Giving us the following 4 types of elementary rings[Note 5]:
- Ring - properties 1-7
- Ring with unity (AKA: u-ring, ring with identity) - properties 1-8
- Commutative ring (AKA: c-ring) - properties 1-7 and 9
- Commutative ring with unity (AKA: cu-ring or q-ring - properties 1-9
Caveats
Some authors define a ring to be what we would call a ring with unity (which we shall call a u-ring throughout the site). Especially if the book covers the topics of rings and modules. We defined "commutative ring" and "ring with unity" above.
See next
- Types of ring
- Ring morphism
- Ring homomorphism
- Kernel of a ring homomorphism - see also: kernel
- Image of a ring homomorphism - see also: image
- Ring isomorphism
- Ring homomorphism
- Unit of a ring
- Division ring
- Ring ideal
- Quotient ring
- Fundamental ring homomorphism theorem
- Ring isomorphism theorems
- Module
Notes
- ↑ So we could have [ilmath]0_R=1_R[/ilmath] or we could have [ilmath]0_R\ne 1_R[/ilmath]
- ↑ there is only one inverse
- ↑ there is only one inverse for an element
- ↑ For multiplicative notation we'd use [ilmath]a^{-1} [/ilmath]
- ↑ field, integral domain are also all rings, there's like 6 kinds. We call "Elementary ring" just the ones listed