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Ring (mathematics)

In mathematics, rings are algebraic structures that generalize fields: multiplication need not be commutative and multiplicative inverses need not exist. In other words, a ring is a set equipped with two binary operations satisfying properties analogous to those of addition and multiplication of integers. Ring elements may be numbers such as integers or complex numbers, but they may also be non-numerical objects such as polynomials, square matrices, functions, and power series.

Formally, a ring is an abelian group whose operation is called addition, with a second binary operation called multiplication that is associative, is distributive over the addition operation, and has a multiplicative identity element. (Some authors use the term "rng" with a missing i to refer to the more general structure that omits this last requirement; see § Notes on the definition.)

Whether a ring is commutative (that is, whether the order in which two elements are multiplied might change the result) has profound implications on its behavior. Commutative algebra, the theory of commutative rings, is a major branch of ring theory. Its development has been greatly influenced by problems and ideas of algebraic number theory and algebraic geometry. The simplest commutative rings are those that admit division by non-zero elements; such rings are called fields.

Examples of commutative rings include the set of integers with their standard addition and multiplication, the set of polynomials with their addition and multiplication, the coordinate ring of an affine algebraic variety, and the ring of integers of a number field. Examples of noncommutative rings include the ring of n × n real square matrices with n ≥ 2, group rings in representation theory, operator algebras in functional analysis, rings of differential operators, and cohomology rings in topology.

The conceptualization of rings spanned the 1870s to the 1920s, with key contributions by Dedekind, Hilbert, Fraenkel, and Noether. Rings were first formalized as a generalization of Dedekind domains that occur in number theory, and of polynomial rings and rings of invariants that occur in algebraic geometry and invariant theory. They later proved useful in other branches of mathematics such as geometry and analysis.

Definition

A ring is a set R equipped with two binary operations[a] + (addition) and (multiplication) satisfying the following three sets of axioms, called the ring axioms[1][2][3]

  1. R is an abelian group under addition, meaning that:
    •   for all a, b, c in R (that is, + is associative)
    •   for all a, b in R (that is, + is commutative).
    • There is an element 0 in R such that   for all a in R (that is, 0 is the additive identity).
    • For each a in R there exists −a in R such that   (that is, −a is the additive inverse of a).
  2. R is a monoid under multiplication, meaning that:
    •   for all a, b, c in R (that is, is associative).
    • There is an element 1 in R such that   and   for all a in R (that is, 1 is the multiplicative identity).[b]
  3. Multiplication is distributive with respect to addition, meaning that:
    •   for all a, b, c in R (left distributivity).
    •   for all a, b, c in R (right distributivity).

Notes on the definition

In the terminology of this article, a ring is defined to have a multiplicative identity, while a structure with the same axiomatic definition but without the requirement for a multiplicative identity is instead called a rng (IPA: /rʊŋ/). For example, the set of even integers with the usual + and ⋅ is a rng, but not a ring. As explained in § History below, many authors apply the term "ring" without requiring a multiplicative identity.

The multiplication symbol is usually omitted; for example, xy means x y.

Although ring addition is commutative, ring multiplication is not required to be commutative: ab need not necessarily equal ba. Rings that also satisfy commutativity for multiplication (such as the ring of integers) are called commutative rings. Books on commutative algebra or algebraic geometry often adopt the convention that ring means commutative ring, to simplify terminology.

In a ring, multiplicative inverses are not required to exist. A nonzero commutative ring in which every nonzero element has a multiplicative inverse is called a field.

The additive group of a ring is the underlying set equipped with only the operation of addition. Although the definition requires that the additive group be abelian, this can be inferred from the other ring axioms.[4] The proof makes use of the "1", and does not work in a rng. (For a rng, omitting the axiom of commutativity of addition leaves it inferable from the remaining rng assumptions only for elements that are products: ab + cd = cd + ab.)

Although most modern authors use the term "ring" as defined here, there are a few who use the term to refer to more general structures in which there is no requirement for multiplication to be associative.[5] For these authors, every algebra is a "ring".

Illustration

 
The integers, along with the two operations of addition and multiplication, form the prototypical example of a ring.

The most familiar example of a ring is the set of all integers   consisting of the numbers

 

The axioms of a ring were elaborated as a generalization of familiar properties of addition and multiplication of integers.

Some properties

Some basic properties of a ring follow immediately from the axioms:

  • The additive identity is unique.
  • The additive inverse of each element is unique.
  • The multiplicative identity is unique.
  • For any element x in a ring R, one has x0 = 0 = 0x (zero is an absorbing element with respect to multiplication) and (–1)x = –x.
  • If 0 = 1 in a ring R (or more generally, 0 is a unit element), then R has only one element, and is called the zero ring.
  • If a ring R contains the zero ring as a subring, then R itself is the zero ring.[6]
  • The binomial formula holds for any x and y satisfying xy = yx.

Example: Integers modulo 4

Equip the set   with the following operations:

  • The sum   in   is the remainder when the integer x + y is divided by 4 (as x + y is always smaller than 8, this remainder is either x + y or x + y − 4). For example,   and  
  • The product   in   is the remainder when the integer xy is divided by 4. For example,   and  

Then   is a ring: each axiom follows from the corresponding axiom for   If x is an integer, the remainder of x when divided by 4 may be considered as an element of   and this element is often denoted by "x mod 4" or   which is consistent with the notation for 0, 1, 2, 3. The additive inverse of any   in   is   For example,  

Example: 2-by-2 matrices

The set of 2-by-2 square matrices with entries in a field F is[7][8][9][10]

 

With the operations of matrix addition and matrix multiplication,   satisfies the above ring axioms. The element   is the multiplicative identity of the ring. If   and   then   while   this example shows that the ring is noncommutative.

More generally, for any ring R, commutative or not, and any nonnegative integer n, the square matrices of dimension n with entries in R form a ring: see Matrix ring.

History

 
Richard Dedekind, one of the founders of ring theory.

Dedekind

The study of rings originated from the theory of polynomial rings and the theory of algebraic integers.[11] In 1871, Richard Dedekind defined the concept of the ring of integers of a number field.[12] In this context, he introduced the terms "ideal" (inspired by Ernst Kummer's notion of ideal number) and "module" and studied their properties. Dedekind did not use the term "ring" and did not define the concept of a ring in a general setting.

Hilbert

The term "Zahlring" (number ring) was coined by David Hilbert in 1892 and published in 1897.[13] In 19th century German, the word "Ring" could mean "association", which is still used today in English in a limited sense (for example, spy ring),[14] so if that were the etymology then it would be similar to the way "group" entered mathematics by being a non-technical word for "collection of related things". According to Harvey Cohn, Hilbert used the term for a ring that had the property of "circling directly back" to an element of itself (in the sense of an equivalence).[15] Specifically, in a ring of algebraic integers, all high powers of an algebraic integer can be written as an integral combination of a fixed set of lower powers, and thus the powers "cycle back". For instance, if   then:

 

and so on; in general, an is going to be an integral linear combination of 1, a, and a2.

Fraenkel and Noether

The first axiomatic definition of a ring was given by Adolf Fraenkel in 1915,[16][17] but his axioms were stricter than those in the modern definition. For instance, he required every non-zero-divisor to have a multiplicative inverse.[18] In 1921, Emmy Noether gave a modern axiomatic definition of commutative rings (with and without 1) and developed the foundations of commutative ring theory in her paper Idealtheorie in Ringbereichen.[19]

Multiplicative identity and the term "ring"

Fraenkel's axioms for a "ring" included that of a multiplicative identity,[20] whereas Noether's did not.[19]

Most or all books on algebra[21][22] up to around 1960 followed Noether's convention of not requiring a 1 for a "ring". Starting in the 1960s, it became increasingly common to see books including the existence of 1 in the definition of "ring", especially in advanced books by notable authors such as Artin,[23] Atiyah and MacDonald,[24] Bourbaki,[25] Eisenbud,[26] and Lang.[27] There are also books published as late as 2006 that use the term without the requirement for a 1.[28][29][30]

Gardner and Wiegandt assert that, when dealing with several objects in the category of rings (as opposed to working with a fixed ring), if one requires all rings to have a 1, then some consequences include the lack of existence of infinite direct sums of rings, and that proper direct summands of rings are not subrings. They conclude that "in many, maybe most, branches of ring theory the requirement of the existence of a unity element is not sensible, and therefore unacceptable."[31] Poonen makes the counterargument that the natural notion for rings is the direct product rather than the direct sum. He further argues that rings without a multiplicative identity are not totally associative (the product of any finite sequence of ring elements, including the empty sequence, is well-defined, independent of the order of operations) and writes "the natural extension of associativity demands that rings should contain an empty product, so it is natural to require rings to have a 1".[32]

Authors who follow either convention for the use of the term "ring" may use one of the following terms to refer to objects satisfying the other convention:

  • to include a requirement a multiplicative identity: "unital ring", "unitary ring", "unit ring", "ring with unity", "ring with identity", "ring with a unit",[33] or "ring with 1".[34]
  • to omit a requirement for a multiplicative identity: "rng"[35] or "pseudo-ring",[36] although the latter may be confusing because it also has other meanings.

Basic examples

Commutative rings

  • The prototypical example is the ring of integers with the two operations of addition and multiplication.
  • The rational, real and complex numbers are commutative rings of a type called fields.
  • A unital associative algebra over a commutative ring R is itself a ring as well as an R-module. Some examples:
    • The algebra R[X] of polynomials with coefficients in R.
    • The algebra   of formal power series with coefficients in R.
    • The set of all continuous real-valued functions defined on the real line forms a commutative  -algebra. The operations are pointwise addition and multiplication of functions.
    • Let X be a set, and let R be a ring. Then the set of all functions from X to R forms a ring, which is commutative if R is commutative. The ring of continuous functions in the previous example is a subring of this ring if X is the real line and  
  • The ring of quadratic integers, the integral closure of  in a quadratic extension of   It is a subring of the ring of all algebraic integers.
  • The ring of profinite integers   the (infinite) product of the rings of p-adic integers   over all prime numbers p.
  • The Hecke ring, the ring generated by Hecke operators.
  • If S is a set, then the power set of S becomes a ring if we define addition to be the symmetric difference of sets and multiplication to be intersection. This is an example of a Boolean ring.

Noncommutative rings

  • For any ring R and any natural number n, the set of all square n-by-n matrices with entries from R, forms a ring with matrix addition and matrix multiplication as operations. For n = 1, this matrix ring is isomorphic to R itself. For n > 1 (and R not the zero ring), this matrix ring is noncommutative.
  • If G is an abelian group, then the endomorphisms of G form a ring, the endomorphism ring End(G) of G. The operations in this ring are addition and composition of endomorphisms. More generally, if V is a left module over a ring R, then the set of all R-linear maps forms a ring, also called the endomorphism ring and denoted by EndR(V).
  • The endomorphism ring of an elliptic curve. It is a commutative ring if the elliptic curve is defined over a field of characteristic zero.
  • If G is a group and R is a ring, the group ring of G over R is a free module over R having G as basis. Multiplication is defined by the rules that the elements of G commute with the elements of R and multiply together as they do in the group G.
  • The ring of differential operators (depending on the context). In fact, many rings that appear in analysis are noncommutative. For example, most Banach algebras are noncommutative.

Non-rings

  • The set of natural numbers   with the usual operations is not a ring, since   is not even a group (not all the elements are invertible with respect to addition — for instance, there is no natural number which can be added to 3 to get 0 as a result). There is a natural way to enlarge it to a ring, by including negative numbers to produce the ring of integers   The natural numbers (including 0) form an algebraic structure known as a semiring (which has all of the axioms of a ring excluding that of an additive inverse).
  • Let R be the set of all continuous functions on the real line that vanish outside a bounded interval that depends on the function, with addition as usual but with multiplication defined as convolution:
     
    Then R is a rng, but not a ring: the Dirac delta function has the property of a multiplicative identity, but it is not a function and hence is not an element of R.

Basic concepts

Products and powers

For each nonnegative integer n, given a sequence   of n elements of R, one can define the product   recursively: let   and let   for 1 ≤ mn.

As a special case, one can define nonnegative integer powers of an element a of a ring: a0 = 1 and   for n ≥ 1. Then   for all m, n ≥ 0.

Elements in a ring

A left zero divisor of a ring R is an element a in the ring such that there exists a nonzero element b of R such that ab = 0.[c] A right zero divisor is defined similarly.

A nilpotent element is an element a such that an = 0 for some n > 0. One example of a nilpotent element is a nilpotent matrix. A nilpotent element in a nonzero ring is necessarily a zero divisor.

An idempotent   is an element such that e2 = e. One example of an idempotent element is a projection in linear algebra.

A unit is an element a having a multiplicative inverse; in this case the inverse is unique, and is denoted by a–1. The set of units of a ring is a group under ring multiplication; this group is denoted by R× or R* or U(R). For example, if R is the ring of all square matrices of size n over a field, then R× consists of the set of all invertible matrices of size n, and is called the general linear group.

Subring

A subset S of R is called a subring if any one of the following equivalent conditions holds:

  • the addition and multiplication of R restrict to give operations S × SS making S a ring with the same multiplicative identity as R.
  • 1 ∈ S; and for all x, y in S, the elements xy, x + y, and −x are in S.
  • S can be equipped with operations making it a ring such that the inclusion map SR is a ring homomorphism.

For example, the ring   of integers is a subring of the field of real numbers and also a subring of the ring of polynomials   (in both cases,   contains 1, which is the multiplicative identity of the larger rings). On the other hand, the subset of even integers   does not contain the identity element 1 and thus does not qualify as a subring of   one could call   a subrng, however.

An intersection of subrings is a subring. Given a subset E of R, the smallest subring of R containing E is the intersection of all subrings of R containing E, and it is called the subring generated by E.

For a ring R, the smallest subring of R is called the characteristic subring of R. It can be generated through addition of copies of 1 and −1. It is possible that   (n times) can be zero. If n is the smallest positive integer such that this occurs, then n is called the characteristic of R. In some rings, n · 1 is never zero for any positive integer n, and those rings are said to have characteristic zero.

Given a ring R, let Z(R) denote the set of all elements x in R such that x commutes with every element in R: xy = yx for any y in R. Then Z(R) is a subring of R, called the center of R. More generally, given a subset X of R, let S be the set of all elements in R that commute with every element in X. Then S is a subring of R, called the centralizer (or commutant) of X. The center is the centralizer of the entire ring R. Elements or subsets of the center are said to be central in R; they (each individually) generate a subring of the center.

Ideal

Let R be a ring. A left ideal of R is a nonempty subset I of R such that for any x, y in I and r in R, the elements x + y and rx are in I. If R I denotes the R-span of I, that is, the set of finite sums

 

then I is a left ideal if   Similarly, a right ideal is a subset I such that   A subset I is said to be a two-sided ideal or simply ideal if it is both a left ideal and right ideal. A one-sided or two-sided ideal is then an additive subgroup of R. If E is a subset of R, then R E is a left ideal, called the left ideal generated by E; it is the smallest left ideal containing E. Similarly, one can consider the right ideal or the two-sided ideal generated by a subset of R.

If x is in R, then Rx and xR are left ideals and right ideals, respectively; they are called the principal left ideals and right ideals generated by x. The principal ideal RxR> is written as (x). For example, the set of all positive and negative multiples of 2 along with 0 form an ideal of the integers, and this ideal is generated by the integer 2. In fact, every ideal of the ring of integers is principal.

Like a group, a ring is said to be simple if it is nonzero and it has no proper nonzero two-sided ideals. A commutative simple ring is precisely a field.

Rings are often studied with special conditions set upon their ideals. For example, a ring in which there is no strictly increasing infinite chain of left ideals is called a left Noetherian ring. A ring in which there is no strictly decreasing infinite chain of left ideals is called a left Artinian ring. It is a somewhat surprising fact that a left Artinian ring is left Noetherian (the Hopkins–Levitzki theorem). The integers, however, form a Noetherian ring which is not Artinian.

For commutative rings, the ideals generalize the classical notion of divisibility and decomposition of an integer into prime numbers in algebra. A proper ideal P of R is called a prime ideal if for any elements   we have that   implies either   or   Equivalently, P is prime if for any ideals   we have that   implies either   or   This latter formulation illustrates the idea of ideals as generalizations of elements.

Homomorphism

A homomorphism from a ring (R, +, ) to a ring (S, ‡, ∗) is a function f from R to S that preserves the ring operations; namely, such that, for all a, b in R the following identities hold:

 

If one is working with rngs, then the third condition is dropped.

A ring homomorphism f is said to be an isomorphism if there exists an inverse homomorphism to f (that is, a ring homomorphism that is an inverse function). Any bijective ring homomorphism is a ring isomorphism. Two rings R, S are said to be isomorphic if there is an isomorphism between them and in that case one writes   A ring homomorphism between the same ring is called an endomorphism, and an isomorphism between the same ring an automorphism.

Examples:

  • The function that maps each integer x to its remainder modulo 4 (a number in {0, 1, 2, 3} ) is a homomorphism from the ring   to the quotient ring   ("quotient ring" is defined below).
  • If u is a unit element in a ring R, then   is a ring homomorphism, called an inner automorphism of R.
  • Let R be a commutative ring of prime characteristic p. Then   is a ring endomorphism of R called the Frobenius homomorphism.
  • The Galois group of a field extension L/K is the set of all automorphisms of L whose restrictions to n are the identity.
  • For any ring R, there are a unique ring homomorphism   and a unique ring homomorphism R → 0.
  • An epimorphism (that is, right-cancelable morphism) of rings need not be surjective. For example, the unique map   is an epimorphism.
  • An algebra homomorphism from a k-algebra to the endomorphism algebra of a vector space over k is called a representation of the algebra.

Given a ring homomorphism f : RS, the set of all elements mapped to 0 by f is called the kernel of f. The kernel is a two-sided ideal of R. The image of f, on the other hand, is not always an ideal, but it is always a subring of S.

To give a ring homomorphism from a commutative ring R to a ring A with image contained in the center of A is the same as to give a structure of an algebra over R to A (which in particular gives a structure of an A-module).

Quotient ring

The notion of quotient ring is analogous to the notion of a quotient group. Given a ring (R, +, ) and a two-sided ideal I of (R, +, ), view I as subgroup of (R, +); then the quotient ring R/I is the set of cosets of I together with the operations

 

for all a, b in R. The ring R/I is also called a factor ring.

As with a quotient group, there is a canonical homomorphism p : RR/I, given by   It is surjective and satisfies the following universal property:

  • If f : RS is a ring homomorphism such that f(I) = 0, then there is a unique homomorphism   such that  

For any ring homomorphism f : RS, invoking the universal property with I = ker f produces a homomorphism   that gives an isomorphism from R/ker f to the image of f.

Module

The concept of a module over a ring generalizes the concept of a vector space (over a field) by generalizing from multiplication of vectors with elements of a field (scalar multiplication) to multiplication with elements of a ring. More precisely, given a ring R, an R-module M is an abelian group equipped with an operation R × MM (associating an element of M to every pair of an element of R and an element of M) that satisfies certain axioms. This operation is commonly denoted by juxtaposition and called multiplication. The axioms of modules are the following: for all a, b in R and all x, y in M,

M is an abelian group under addition.
 

When the ring is noncommutative these axioms define left modules; right modules are defined similarly by writing xa instead of ax. This is not only a change of notation, as the last axiom of right modules (that is x(ab) = (xa)b) becomes (ab)x = b(ax), if left multiplication (by ring elements) is used for a right module.

Basic examples of modules are ideals, including the ring itself.

Although similarly defined, the theory of modules is much more complicated than that of vector space, mainly, because, unlike vector spaces, modules are not characterized (up to an isomorphism) by a single invariant (the dimension of a vector space). In particular, not all modules have a basis.

The axioms of modules imply that (−1)x = −x, where the first minus denotes the additive inverse in the ring and the second minus the additive inverse in the module. Using this and denoting repeated addition by a multiplication by a positive integer allows identifying abelian groups with modules over the ring of integers.

Any ring homomorphism induces a structure of a module: if f : RS is a ring homomorphism, then S is a left module over R by the multiplication: rs = f(r)s. If R is commutative or if f(R) is contained in the center of S, the ring S is called a R-algebra. In particular, every ring is an algebra over the integers.

Constructions

Direct product

Let R and S be rings. Then the product R × S can be equipped with the following natural ring structure:

 

for all r1, r2 in R and s1, s2 in S. The ring R × S with the above operations of addition and multiplication and the multiplicative identity (1, 1) is called the direct product of R with S. The same construction also works for an arbitrary family of rings: if Ri are rings indexed by a set I, then   is a ring with componentwise addition and multiplication.

Let R be a commutative ring and   be ideals such that   whenever ij. Then the Chinese remainder theorem says there is a canonical ring isomorphism:

 

A "finite" direct product may also be viewed as a direct sum of ideals.[37] Namely, let   be rings,   the inclusions with the images   (in particular   are rings though not subrings). Then   are ideals of R and

 
as a direct sum of abelian groups (because for abelian groups finite products are the same as direct sums). Clearly the direct sum of such ideals also defines a product of rings that is isomorphic to R. Equivalently, the above can be done through central idempotents. Assume that R has the above decomposition. Then we can write
 
By the conditions on   one has that ei are central idempotents and eiej = 0, ij (orthogonal). Again, one can reverse the construction. Namely, if one is given a partition of 1 in orthogonal central idempotents, then let   which are two-sided ideals. If each ei is not a sum of orthogonal central idempotents,[d] then their direct sum is isomorphic to R.

An important application of an infinite direct product is the construction of a projective limit of rings (see below). Another application is a restricted product of a family of rings (cf. adele ring).

Polynomial ring

Given a symbol t (called a variable) and a commutative ring R, the set of polynomials

 

forms a commutative ring with the usual addition and multiplication, containing R as a subring. It is called the polynomial ring over R. More generally, the set   of all polynomials in variables   forms a commutative ring, containing   as subrings.

If R is an integral domain, then R[t] is also an integral domain; its field of fractions is the field of rational functions. If R is a Noetherian ring, then R[t] is a Noetherian ring. If R is a unique factorization domain, then R[t] is a unique factorization domain. Finally, R is a field if and only if R[t] is a principal ideal domain.

Let   be commutative rings. Given an element x of S, one can consider the ring homomorphism

 

(that is, the substitution). If S = R[t] and x = t, then f(t) = f. Because of this, the polynomial f is often also denoted by f(t). The image of the map   is denoted by R[x]; it is the same thing as the subring of S generated by R and x.

Example:   denotes the image of the homomorphism

 

In other words, it is the subalgebra of k[t] generated by t2 and t3.

Example: let f be a polynomial in one variable, that is, an element in a polynomial ring R. Then f(x + h) is an element in R[h] and f(x + h) – f(x) is divisible by h in that ring. The result of substituting zero to h in (f(x + h) – f(x)) / h is f' (x), the derivative of f at x.

The substitution is a special case of the universal property of a polynomial ring. The property states: given a ring homomorphism   and an element x in S there exists a unique ring homomorphism   such that   and   restricts to ϕ.[38] For example, choosing a basis, a symmetric algebra satisfies the universal property and so is a polynomial ring.

To give an example, let S be the ring of all functions from R to itself; the addition and the multiplication are those of functions. Let x be the identity function. Each r in R defines a constant function, giving rise to the homomorphism RS. The universal property says that this map extends uniquely to

 

(t maps to x) where   is the polynomial function defined by f. The resulting map is injective if and only if R is infinite.

Given a non-constant monic polynomial f in R[t], there exists a ring S containing R such that f is a product of linear factors in S[t].[39]

Let k be an algebraically closed field. The Hilbert's Nullstellensatz (theorem of zeros) states that there is a natural one-to-one correspondence between the set of all prime ideals in   and the set of closed subvarieties of kn. In particular, many local problems in algebraic geometry may be attacked through the study of the generators of an ideal in a polynomial ring. (cf. Gröbner basis.)

There are some other related constructions. A formal power series ring   consists of formal power series

 

together with multiplication and addition that mimic those for convergent series. It contains R[t] as a subring. A formal power series ring does not have the universal property of a polynomial ring; a series may not converge after a substitution. The important advantage of a formal power series ring over a polynomial ring is that it is local (in fact, complete).

Matrix ring and endomorphism ring

Let R be a ring (not necessarily commutative). The set of all square matrices of size n with entries in R forms a ring with the entry-wise addition and the usual matrix multiplication. It is called the matrix ring and is denoted by Mn(R). Given a right R-module U, the set of all R-linear maps from U to itself forms a ring with addition that is of function and multiplication that is of composition of functions; it is called the endomorphism ring of U and is denoted by EndR(U).

As in linear algebra, a matrix ring may be canonically interpreted as an endomorphism ring:   This is a special case of the following fact: If   is an R-linear map, then f may be written as a matrix with entries fij in S = EndR(U), resulting in the ring isomorphism:

 

Any ring homomorphism RS induces Mn(R) → Mn(S).[40]

Schur's lemma says that if U is a simple right R-module, then EndR(U) is a division ring.[41] If   is a direct sum of mi-copies of simple R-modules   then

 

The Artin–Wedderburn theorem states any semisimple ring (cf. below) is of this form.

A ring R and the matrix ring Mn(R) over it are Morita equivalent: the category of right modules of R is equivalent to the category of right modules over Mn(R).[40] In particular, two-sided ideals in R correspond in one-to-one to two-sided ideals in Mn(R).

Limits and colimits of rings

Let Ri be a sequence of rings such that Ri is a subring of Ri + 1 for all i. Then the union (or filtered colimit) of Ri is the ring   defined as follows: it is the disjoint union of all Ri's modulo the equivalence relation x ~ y if and only if x = y in Ri for sufficiently large i.

Examples of colimits:

  • A polynomial ring in infinitely many variables:  
  • The algebraic closure of finite fields of the same characteristic  
  • The field of formal Laurent series over a field k:   (it is the field of fractions of the formal power series ring  )
  • The function field of an algebraic variety over a field k is   where the limit runs over all the coordinate rings k[U] of nonempty open subsets U (more succinctly it is the stalk of the structure sheaf at the generic point.)

Any commutative ring is the colimit of finitely generated subrings.

A projective limit (or a filtered limit) of rings is defined as follows. Suppose we're given a family of rings Ri, i running over positive integers, say, and ring homomorphisms RjRi, ji such that RiRi are all the identities and RkRjRi is RkRi whenever kji. Then   is the subring of   consisting of (xn) such that xj maps to xi under RjRi, ji.

For an example of a projective limit, see § Completion.

Localization

The localization generalizes the construction of the field of fractions of an integral domain to an arbitrary ring and modules. Given a (not necessarily commutative) ring R and a subset S of R, there exists a ring   together with the ring homomorphism   that "inverts" S; that is, the homomorphism maps elements in S to unit elements in   and, moreover, any ring homomorphism from R that "inverts" S uniquely factors through  [42] The ring   is called the localization of R with respect to S. For example, if R is a commutative ring and f an element in R, then the localization   consists of elements of the form   (to be precise,  )[43]

The localization is frequently applied to a commutative ring R with respect to the complement of a prime ideal (or a union of prime ideals) in R. In that case   one often writes   for     is then a local ring with the maximal ideal   This is the reason for the terminology "localization". The field of fractions of an integral domain R is the localization of R at the prime ideal zero. If   is a prime ideal of a commutative ring R, then the field of fractions of   is the same as the residue field of the local ring   and is denoted by  

If M is a left R-module, then the localization of M with respect to S is given by a change of rings  

The most important properties of localization are the following: when R is a commutative ring and S a multiplicatively closed subset

  •   is a bijection between the set of all prime ideals in R disjoint from S and the set of all prime ideals in  [44]
  •   f running over elements in S with partial ordering given by divisibility.[45]
  • The localization is exact:
     
    is exact over   whenever   is exact over R.
  • Conversely, if   is exact for any maximal ideal   then   is exact.
  • A remark: localization is no help in proving a global existence. One instance of this is that if two modules are isomorphic at all prime ideals, it does not follow that they are isomorphic. (One way to explain this is that the localization allows one to view a module as a sheaf over prime ideals and a sheaf is inherently a local notion.)

In category theory, a localization of a category amounts to making some morphisms isomorphisms. An element in a commutative ring R may be thought of as an endomorphism of any R-module. Thus, categorically, a localization of R with respect to a subset S of R is a functor from the category of R-modules to itself that sends elements of S viewed as endomorphisms to automorphisms and is universal with respect to this property. (Of course, R then maps to   and R-modules map to  -modules.)

Completion

Let R be a commutative ring, and let I be an ideal of R. The completion of R at I is the projective limit   it is a commutative ring. The canonical homomorphisms from R to the quotients   induce a homomorphism   The latter homomorphism is injective if R is a Noetherian integral domain and I is a proper ideal, or if R is a Noetherian local ring with maximal ideal I, by Krull's intersection theorem.[46] The construction is especially useful when I is a maximal ideal.

The basic example is the completion of   at the principal ideal (p) generated by a prime number p; it is called the ring of p-adic integers and is denoted   The completion can in this case be constructed also from the p-adic absolute value on   The p-adic absolute value on   is a map   from   to   given by   where   denotes the exponent of p in the prime factorization of a nonzero integer n into prime numbers (we also put   and  ). It defines a distance function on   and the completion of   as a metric space is denoted by   It is again a field since the field operations extend to the completion. The subring of   consisting of elements x with   is isomorphic to  

Similarly, the formal power series ring R[{[t]}] is the completion of R[t] at (t) (see also Hensel's lemma)

A complete ring has much simpler structure than a commutative ring. This owns to the Cohen structure theorem, which says, roughly, that a complete local ring tends to look like a formal power series ring or a quotient of it. On the other hand, the interaction between the integral closure and completion has been among the most important aspects that distinguish modern commutative ring theory from the classical one developed by the likes of Noether. Pathological examples found by Nagata led to the reexamination of the roles of Noetherian rings and motivated, among other things, the definition of excellent ring.

Rings with generators and relations

The most general way to construct a ring is by specifying generators and relations. Let F be a free ring (that is, free algebra over the integers) with the set X of symbols, that is, F consists of polynomials with integral coefficients in noncommuting variables that are elements of X. A free ring satisfies the universal property: any function from the set X to a ring R factors through F so that FR is the unique ring homomorphism. Just as in the group case, every ring can be represented as a quotient of a free ring.[47]

Now, we can impose relations among symbols in X by taking a quotient. Explicitly, if E is a subset of F, then the quotient ring of F by the ideal generated by E is called the ring with generators X and relations E. If we used a ring, say, A as a base ring instead of   then the resulting ring will be over A. For example, if   then the resulting ring will be the usual polynomial ring with coefficients in A in variables that are elements of X (It is also the same thing as the symmetric algebra over A with symbols X.)

In the category-theoretic terms, the formation   is the left adjoint functor of the forgetful functor from the category of rings to Set (and it is often called the free ring functor.)

Let A, B be algebras over a commutative ring R. Then the tensor product of R-modules   is an R-algebra with multiplication characterized by  

Special kinds of rings

Domains

A nonzero ring with no nonzero zero-divisors is called a domain. A commutative domain is called an integral domain. The most important integral domains are principal ideal domains, PIDs for short, and fields. A principal ideal domain is an integral domain in which every ideal is principal. An important class of integral domains that contain a PID is a unique factorization domain (UFD), an integral domain in which every nonunit element is a product of prime elements (an element is prime if it generates a prime ideal.) The fundamental question in algebraic number theory is on the extent to which the ring of (generalized) integers in a number field, where an "ideal" admits prime factorization, fails to be a PID.

Among theorems concerning a PID, the most important one is the structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain. The theorem may be illustrated by the following application to linear algebra.[48] Let V be a finite-dimensional vector space over a field k and f: VV a linear map with minimal polynomial q. Then, since k[t] is a unique factorization domain, q factors into powers of distinct irreducible polynomials (that is, prime elements):

 

Letting   we make V a k[t]-module. The structure theorem then says V is a direct sum of cyclic modules, each of which is isomorphic to the module of the form   Now, if   then such a cyclic module (for pi) has a basis in which the restriction of f is represented by a Jordan matrix. Thus, if, say, k is algebraically closed, then all pi's are of the form tλi and the above decomposition corresponds to the Jordan canonical form of f.

In algebraic geometry, UFDs arise because of smoothness. More precisely, a point in a variety (over a perfect field) is smooth if the local ring at the point is a regular local ring. A regular local ring is a UFD.[49]

The following is a chain of class inclusions that describes the relationship between rings, domains and fields:

rngsringscommutative ringsintegral domainsintegrally closed domainsGCD domainsunique factorization domainsprincipal ideal domainsEuclidean domainsfieldsalgebraically closed fields

Division ring

A division ring is a ring such that every non-zero element is a unit. A commutative division ring is a field. A prominent example of a division ring that is not a field is the ring of quaternions. Any centralizer in a division ring is also a division ring. In particular, the center of a division ring is a field. It turned out that every finite domain (in particular finite division ring) is a field; in particular commutative (the Wedderburn's little theorem).

Every module over a division ring is a free module (has a basis); consequently, much of linear algebra can be carried out over a division ring instead of a field.

The study of conjugacy classes figures prominently in the classical theory of division rings; see, for example, the Cartan–Brauer–Hua theorem.

A cyclic algebra, introduced by L. E. Dickson, is a generalization of a quaternion algebra.

Semisimple rings

A semisimple module is a direct sum of simple modules. A semisimple ring is a ring that is semisimple as a left module (or right module) over itself.

Examples

The Weyl algebra over a field is a simple ring, but it is not semisimple. The same holds for a ring of differential operators in many variables.

Properties

Any module over a semisimple ring is semisimple. (Proof: A free module over a semisimple ring is semisimple and any module is a quotient of a free module.)

For a ring R, the following are equivalent:

Semisimplicity is closely related to separability. A unital associative algebra A over a field k is said to be separable if the base extension   is semisimple for every field extension F/k. If A happens to be a field, then this is equivalent to the usual definition in field theory (cf. separable extension.)

Central simple algebra and Brauer group

For a field k, a k-algebra is central if its center is k and is simple if it is a simple ring. Since the center of a simple k-algebra is a field, any simple k-algebra is a central simple algebra over its center. In this section, a central simple algebra is assumed to have finite dimension. Also, we mostly fix the base field; thus, an algebra refers to a k-algebra. The matrix ring of size n over a ring R will be denoted by Rn.

The Skolem–Noether theorem states any automorphism of a central simple algebra is inner.

Two central simple algebras A and B are said to be similar if there are integers n and m such that  [50] Since   the similarity is an equivalence relation. The similarity classes [A] with the multiplication   form an abelian group called the Brauer group of k and is denoted by Br(k). By the Artin–Wedderburn theorem, a central simple algebra is the matrix ring of a division ring; thus, each similarity class is represented by a unique division ring.

For example, Br(k) is trivial if k is a finite field or an algebraically closed field (more generally quasi-algebraically closed field; cf. Tsen's theorem).   has order 2 (a special case of the theorem of Frobenius). Finally, if k is a nonarchimedean local field (for example,  ), then   through the invariant map.

Now, if F is a field extension of k, then the base extension   induces Br(k) → Br(F). Its kernel is denoted by Br(F/k). It consists of [A] such that   is a matrix ring over F (that is, A is split by F.) If the extension is finite and Galois, then Br(F/k) is canonically isomorphic to  [51]

Azumaya algebras generalize the notion of central simple algebras to a commutative local ring.

Valuation ring

If K is a field, a valuation v is a group homomorphism from the multiplicative group K to a totally ordered abelian group G such that, for any f, g in K with f + g nonzero, v(f + g) ≥ min{v(f), v(g)}. The valuation ring of v is the subring of K consisting of zero and all nonzero f such that v(f) ≥ 0.

Examples:

  • The field of formal Laurent series   over a field k comes with the valuation v such that v(f) is the least degree of a nonzero term in f; the valuation ring of v is the formal power series ring  
  • More generally, given a field k and a totally ordered abelian group G, let   be the set of all functions from G to k whose supports (the sets of points at which the functions are nonzero) are well ordered. It is a field with the multiplication given by convolution:
     
    It also comes with the valuation v such that v(f) is the least element in the support of f. The subring consisting of elements with finite support is called the group ring of G (which makes sense even if G is not commutative). If G is the ring of integers, then we recover the previous example (by identifying f with the series whose n-th coefficient is f(n).)

Rings with extra structure

A ring may be viewed as an abelian group (by using the addition operation), with extra structure: namely, ring multiplication. In the same way, there are other mathematical objects which may be considered as rings with extra structure. For example:

  • An associative algebra is a ring that is also a vector space over a field n such that the scalar multiplication is compatible with the ring multiplication. For instance, the set of n-by-n matrices over the real field   has dimension n2 as a real vector space.
  • A ring R is a topological ring if its set of elements R is given a topology which makes the addition map (  ) and the multiplication map   to be both continuous as maps between topological spaces (where X × X inherits the product topology or any other product in the category). For example, n-by-n matrices over the real numbers could be given either the Euclidean topology, or the Zariski topology, and in either case one would obtain a topological ring.
  • A λ-ring is a commutative ring R together with operations λn: RR that are like n-th exterior powers:
 
For example,   is a λ-ring with   the binomial coefficients. The notion plays a central rule in the algebraic approach to the Riemann–Roch theorem.

Some examples of the ubiquity of rings

Many different kinds of mathematical objects can be fruitfully analyzed in terms of some associated ring.

Cohomology ring of a topological space

To any topological space X one can associate its integral cohomology ring

 

a graded ring. There are also homology groups   of a space, and indeed these were defined first, as a useful tool for distinguishing between certain pairs of topological spaces, like the spheres and tori, for which the methods of point-set topology are not well-suited. Cohomology groups were later defined in terms of homology groups in a way which is roughly analogous to the dual of a vector space. To know each individual integral homology group is essentially the same as knowing each individual integral cohomology group, because of the universal coefficient theorem. However, the advantage of the cohomology groups is that there is a natural product, which is analogous to the observation that one can multiply pointwise a k-multilinear form and an l-multilinear form to get a (k + l)-multilinear form.

The ring structure in cohomology provides the foundation for characteristic classes of fiber bundles, intersection theory on manifolds and algebraic varieties, Schubert calculus and much more.

Burnside ring of a group

To any group is associated its Burnside ring which uses a ring to describe the various ways the group can act on a finite set. The Burnside ring's additive group is the free abelian group whose basis are the transitive actions of the group and whose addition is the disjoint union of the action. Expressing an action in terms of the basis is decomposing an action into its transitive constituents. The multiplication is easily expressed in terms of the representation ring: the multiplication in the Burnside ring is formed by writing the tensor product of two permutation modules as a permutation module. The ring structure allows a formal way of subtracting one action from another. Since the Burnside ring is contained as a finite index subring of the representation ring, one can pass easily from one to the other by extending the coefficients from integers to the rational numbers.

Representation ring of a group ring

To any group ring or Hopf algebra is associated its representation ring or "Green ring". The representation ring's additive group is the free abelian group whose basis are the indecomposable modules and whose addition corresponds to the direct sum. Expressing a module in terms of the basis is finding an indecomposable decomposition of the module. The multiplication is the tensor product. When the algebra is semisimple, the representation ring is just the character ring from character theory, which is more or less the Grothendieck group given a ring structure.

Function field of an irreducible algebraic variety

To any irreducible algebraic variety is associated its function field. The points of an algebraic variety correspond to valuation rings contained in the function field and containing the coordinate ring. The study of algebraic geometry makes heavy use of commutative algebra to study geometric concepts in terms of ring-theoretic properties. Birational geometry studies maps between the subrings of the function field.

Face ring of a simplicial complex

Every simplicial complex has an associated face ring, also called its Stanley–Reisner ring. This ring reflects many of the combinatorial properties of the simplicial complex, so it is of particular interest in algebraic combinatorics. In particular, the algebraic geometry of the Stanley–Reisner ring was used to characterize the numbers of faces in each dimension of simplicial polytopes.

Category-theoretic description

Every ring can be thought of as a monoid in Ab, the category of abelian groups (thought of as a monoidal category under the tensor product of  -modules). The monoid action of a ring R on an abelian group is simply an R-module. Essentially, an R-module is a generalization of the notion of a vector space – where rather than a vector space over a field, one has a "vector space over a ring".

Let (A, +) be an abelian group and let End(A) be its endomorphism ring (see above). Note that, essentially, End(A) is the set of all morphisms of A, where if f is in End(A), and g is in End(A), the following rules may be used to compute f + g and f g:

 

where + as in f(x) + g(x) is addition in A, and function composition is denoted from right to left. Therefore, associated to any abelian group, is a ring. Conversely, given any ring, (R, +, ), (R, +) is an abelian group. Furthermore, for every r in R, right (or left) multiplication by r gives rise to a morphism of (R, +), by right (or left) distributivity. Let A = (R, +). Consider those endomorphisms of A, that "factor through" right (or left) multiplication of R. In other words, let EndR(A) be the set of all morphisms m of A, having the property that m(r x) = r m(x). It was seen that every r in R gives rise to a morphism of A: right multiplication by r. It is in fact true that this association of any element of R, to a morphism of A, as a function from R to EndR(A), is an isomorphism of rings. In this sense, therefore, any ring can be viewed as the endomorphism ring of some abelian X-group (by X-group, it is meant a group with X being its set of operators).[52] In essence, the most general form of a ring, is the endomorphism group of some abelian X-group.

Any ring can be seen as a preadditive category with a single object. It is therefore natural to consider arbitrary preadditive categories to be generalizations of rings. And indeed, many definitions and theorems originally given for rings can be translated to this more general context. Additive functors between preadditive categories generalize the concept of ring homomorphism, and ideals in additive categories can be defined as sets of morphisms closed under addition and under composition with arbitrary morphisms.

Generalization

Algebraists have defined structures more general than rings by weakening or dropping some of ring axioms.

Rng

A rng is the same as a ring, except that the existence of a multiplicative identity is not assumed.[53]

Nonassociative ring

A nonassociative ring is an algebraic structure that satisfies all of the ring axioms except the associative property and the existence of a multiplicative identity. A notable example is a Lie algebra. There exists some structure theory for such algebras that generalizes the analogous results for Lie algebras and associative algebras.[citation needed]

Semiring

A semiring (sometimes rig) is obtained by weakening the assumption that (R, +) is an abelian group to the assumption that (R, +) is a commutative monoid, and adding the axiom that 0 ⋅ a = a ⋅ 0 = 0 for all a in R (since it no longer follows from the other axioms).

Examples:

  • the non-negative integers   with ordinary addition and multiplication;
  • the tropical semiring.

Other ring-like objects

Ring object in a category

Let C be a category with finite products. Let pt denote a terminal object of C (an empty product). A ring object in C is an object R equipped with morphisms   (addition),   (multiplication),   (additive identity),   (additive inverse), and   (multiplicative identity) satisfying the usual ring axioms. Equivalently, a ring object is an object R equipped with a factorization of its functor of points   through the category of rings:  

Ring scheme

In algebraic geometry, a ring scheme over a base scheme S is a ring object in the category of S-schemes. One example is the ring scheme Wn over  , which for any commutative ring A returns the ring Wn(A) of p-isotypic Witt vectors of length n over A.[54]

Ring spectrum

In algebraic topology, a ring spectrum is a spectrum X together with a multiplication   and a unit map SX from the sphere spectrum S, such that the ring axiom diagrams commute up to homotopy. In practice, it is common to define a ring spectrum as a monoid object in a good category of spectra such as the category of symmetric spectra.

See also

Special types of rings:

Notes

  1. ^ This means that each operation is defined and produces a unique result in R for each ordered pair of elements of R.
  2. ^ The existence of 1 is not assumed by some authors; here, the term rng is used if existence of a multiplicative identity is not assumed. See next subsection.
  3. ^ Some other authors such as Lang further require a zero divisor to be nonzero.
  4. ^ Such a central idempotent is called centrally primitive.

Citations

  1. ^ Bourbaki 1989, p. 96, Ch 1, §8.1.
  2. ^ Saunders Mac Lane; Garrett Birkhoff (1967). Algebra. AMS Chelsea. p. 85.
  3. ^ Lang, Serge (2002). Algebra (Third ed.). Springer-Verlag. p. 83.
  4. ^ Isaacs 1994, p. 160.
  5. ^ "Non-associative rings and algebras". Encyclopedia of Mathematics.
  6. ^ Isaacs 1994, p. 161.
  7. ^ Lam, A first course on noncommutative rings, 2nd edition, Springer, 2001; Theorem 3.1.
  8. ^ Lang, Undergraduate algebra, Springer, 2005; V.§3.
  9. ^ Serre, Lie algebras and Lie groups, 2nd edition, corrected 5th printing, Springer, 2006; p. 3.
  10. ^ Serre, Local fields, Springer, 1979; p. 158.
  11. ^ "The development of Ring Theory".
  12. ^ Kleiner 1998, p. 27.
  13. ^ Hilbert 1897.
  14. ^ "Why is a ring called a "ring"? – MathOverflow".
  15. ^ Cohn, Harvey (1980), Advanced Number Theory, New York: Dover Publications, p. 49, ISBN 978-0-486-64023-5
  16. ^ Fraenkel 1915, pp. 143–145.
  17. ^ Jacobson 2009, p. 86, footnote 1.
  18. ^ Fraenkel 1915, p. 144, axiom R8).
  19. ^ a b Noether 1921, p. 29.
  20. ^ Fraenkel 1915, p. 144, axiom R7).
  21. ^ van der Waerden 1930.
  22. ^ Zariski & Samuel 1958.
  23. ^ Artin 2018, p. 346.
  24. ^ Atiyah & MacDonald 1969, p. 1.
  25. ^ Bourbaki 1989, p. 96.
  26. ^ Eisenbud, p. 11.
  27. ^ Lang, p. 83.
  28. ^ Gallian 2006, p. 235.
  29. ^ Hungerford 1997, p. 42.
  30. ^ Warner 1965, p. 188.
  31. ^ Gardner & Wiegandt 2003.
  32. ^ Poonen 2018.
  33. ^ Wilder 1965, p. 176.
  34. ^ Rotman 1998, p. 7.
  35. ^ Jacobson 2009, p. 155.
  36. ^ Bourbaki 1989, p. 98.
  37. ^ Cohn 2003, Theorem 4.5.1.
  38. ^ Jacobson 1974, Theorem 2.10.
  39. ^ Bourbaki 1964, Ch 5. §1, Lemma 2.
  40. ^ a b Cohn 2003, 4.4.
  41. ^ Lang 2002, Ch. XVII. Proposition 1.1.
  42. ^ Cohn 1995, Proposition 1.3.1.
  43. ^ Eisenbud 2004, Exercise 2.2.
  44. ^ Milne 2012, Proposition 6.4.
  45. ^ Milne 2012, end of Chapter 7.
  46. ^ Atiyah & Macdonald 1969, Theorem 10.17 and its corollaries.
  47. ^ Cohn 1995, pg. 242.
  48. ^ Lang 2002, Ch XIV, §2.
  49. ^ Weibel, Ch 1, Theorem 3.8.
  50. ^ Milne & CFT, Ch IV, §2.
  51. ^ Serre, J-P., Applications algébriques de la cohomologie des groupes, I, II, Séminaire Henri Cartan, 1950/51 [1]
  52. ^ Jacobson 2009, p. 162, Theorem 3.2.
  53. ^ Jacobson 2009.
  54. ^ Serre, p. 44.

References

General references

  • Artin, Michael (2018). Algebra (2nd ed.). Pearson.
  • Atiyah, Michael; Macdonald, Ian G. (1969). Introduction to commutative algebra. Addison–Wesley.
  • Bourbaki, N. (1964). Algèbre commutative. Hermann.
  • Bourbaki, N. (1989). Algebra I, Chapters 1–3. Springer.
  • Cohn, Paul Moritz (2003), Basic algebra: groups, rings, and fields, Springer, ISBN 978-1-85233-587-8.
  • Eisenbud, David (1995). Commutative algebra with a view toward algebraic geometry. Springer.
  • Gallian, Joseph A. (2006). Contemporary Abstract Algebra, Sixth Edition. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 9780618514717.
  • Gardner, J.W.; Wiegandt, R. (2003). Radical Theory of Rings. Chapman & Hall/CRC Pure and Applied Mathematics. ISBN 0824750330.
  • Herstein, I. N. (1994) [reprint of the 1968 original]. Noncommutative rings. Carus Mathematical Monographs. Vol. 15. With an afterword by Lance W. Small. Mathematical Association of America. ISBN 0-88385-015-X.
  • Hungerford, Thomas W. (1997). Abstract Algebra: an Introduction, Second Edition. Brooks/Cole. ISBN 9780030105593.
  • Jacobson, Nathan (2009). Basic algebra. Vol. 1 (2nd ed.). Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-47189-1.
  • Jacobson, Nathan (1964). "Structure of rings". American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications (Revised ed.). 37.
  • Jacob

ring, mathematics, this, article, about, algebraic, structure, other, uses, mathematics, ring, disambiguation, mathematics, mathematics, rings, algebraic, structures, that, generalize, fields, multiplication, need, commutative, multiplicative, inverses, need, . This article is about the algebraic structure For other uses in mathematics see Ring disambiguation Mathematics In mathematics rings are algebraic structures that generalize fields multiplication need not be commutative and multiplicative inverses need not exist In other words a ring is a set equipped with two binary operations satisfying properties analogous to those of addition and multiplication of integers Ring elements may be numbers such as integers or complex numbers but they may also be non numerical objects such as polynomials square matrices functions and power series Formally a ring is an abelian group whose operation is called addition with a second binary operation called multiplication that is associative is distributive over the addition operation and has a multiplicative identity element Some authors use the term rng with a missing i to refer to the more general structure that omits this last requirement see Notes on the definition Whether a ring is commutative that is whether the order in which two elements are multiplied might change the result has profound implications on its behavior Commutative algebra the theory of commutative rings is a major branch of ring theory Its development has been greatly influenced by problems and ideas of algebraic number theory and algebraic geometry The simplest commutative rings are those that admit division by non zero elements such rings are called fields Examples of commutative rings include the set of integers with their standard addition and multiplication the set of polynomials with their addition and multiplication the coordinate ring of an affine algebraic variety and the ring of integers of a number field Examples of noncommutative rings include the ring of n n real square matrices with n 2 group rings in representation theory operator algebras in functional analysis rings of differential operators and cohomology rings in topology The conceptualization of rings spanned the 1870s to the 1920s with key contributions by Dedekind Hilbert Fraenkel and Noether Rings were first formalized as a generalization of Dedekind domains that occur in number theory and of polynomial rings and rings of invariants that occur in algebraic geometry and invariant theory They later proved useful in other branches of mathematics such as geometry and analysis Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Notes on the definition 2 Illustration 2 1 Some properties 2 2 Example Integers modulo 4 2 3 Example 2 by 2 matrices 3 History 3 1 Dedekind 3 2 Hilbert 3 3 Fraenkel and Noether 3 4 Multiplicative identity and the term ring 4 Basic examples 4 1 Commutative rings 4 2 Noncommutative rings 4 3 Non rings 5 Basic concepts 5 1 Products and powers 5 2 Elements in a ring 5 3 Subring 5 4 Ideal 5 5 Homomorphism 5 6 Quotient ring 6 Module 7 Constructions 7 1 Direct product 7 2 Polynomial ring 7 3 Matrix ring and endomorphism ring 7 4 Limits and colimits of rings 7 5 Localization 7 6 Completion 7 7 Rings with generators and relations 8 Special kinds of rings 8 1 Domains 8 2 Division ring 8 3 Semisimple rings 8 3 1 Examples 8 3 2 Properties 8 4 Central simple algebra and Brauer group 8 5 Valuation ring 9 Rings with extra structure 10 Some examples of the ubiquity of rings 10 1 Cohomology ring of a topological space 10 2 Burnside ring of a group 10 3 Representation ring of a group ring 10 4 Function field of an irreducible algebraic variety 10 5 Face ring of a simplicial complex 11 Category theoretic description 12 Generalization 12 1 Rng 12 2 Nonassociative ring 12 3 Semiring 13 Other ring like objects 13 1 Ring object in a category 13 2 Ring scheme 13 3 Ring spectrum 14 See also 15 Notes 16 Citations 17 References 17 1 General references 17 2 Special references 17 3 Primary sources 17 4 Historical referencesDefinition EditA ring is a set R equipped with two binary operations a addition and multiplication satisfying the following three sets of axioms called the ring axioms 1 2 3 R is an abelian group under addition meaning that a b c a b c displaystyle a b c a b c for all a b c in R that is is associative a b b a displaystyle a b b a for all a b in R that is is commutative There is an element 0 in R such that a 0 a displaystyle a 0 a for all a in R that is 0 is the additive identity For each a in R there exists a in R such that a a 0 displaystyle a a 0 that is a is the additive inverse of a R is a monoid under multiplication meaning that a b c a b c displaystyle a cdot b cdot c a cdot b cdot c for all a b c in R that is is associative There is an element 1 in R such that a 1 a displaystyle a cdot 1 a and 1 a a displaystyle 1 cdot a a for all a in R that is 1 is the multiplicative identity b Multiplication is distributive with respect to addition meaning that a b c a b a c displaystyle a cdot b c a cdot b a cdot c for all a b c in R left distributivity b c a b a c a displaystyle b c cdot a b cdot a c cdot a for all a b c in R right distributivity Notes on the definition Edit In the terminology of this article a ring is defined to have a multiplicative identity while a structure with the same axiomatic definition but without the requirement for a multiplicative identity is instead called a rng IPA r ʊ ŋ For example the set of even integers with the usual and is a rng but not a ring As explained in History below many authors apply the term ring without requiring a multiplicative identity The multiplication symbol is usually omitted for example xy means x y Although ring addition is commutative ring multiplication is not required to be commutative ab need not necessarily equal ba Rings that also satisfy commutativity for multiplication such as the ring of integers are called commutative rings Books on commutative algebra or algebraic geometry often adopt the convention that ring means commutative ring to simplify terminology In a ring multiplicative inverses are not required to exist A nonzero commutative ring in which every nonzero element has a multiplicative inverse is called a field The additive group of a ring is the underlying set equipped with only the operation of addition Although the definition requires that the additive group be abelian this can be inferred from the other ring axioms 4 The proof makes use of the 1 and does not work in a rng For a rng omitting the axiom of commutativity of addition leaves it inferable from the remaining rng assumptions only for elements that are products ab cd cd ab Although most modern authors use the term ring as defined here there are a few who use the term to refer to more general structures in which there is no requirement for multiplication to be associative 5 For these authors every algebra is a ring Illustration Edit The integers along with the two operations of addition and multiplication form the prototypical example of a ring The most familiar example of a ring is the set of all integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z consisting of the numbers 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 displaystyle dots 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 dots The axioms of a ring were elaborated as a generalization of familiar properties of addition and multiplication of integers Some properties Edit Some basic properties of a ring follow immediately from the axioms The additive identity is unique The additive inverse of each element is unique The multiplicative identity is unique For any element x in a ring R one has x0 0 0x zero is an absorbing element with respect to multiplication and 1 x x If 0 1 in a ring R or more generally 0 is a unit element then R has only one element and is called the zero ring If a ring R contains the zero ring as a subring then R itself is the zero ring 6 The binomial formula holds for any x and y satisfying xy yx Example Integers modulo 4 Edit See also Modular arithmetic Equip the set Z 4 Z 0 1 2 3 displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z left overline 0 overline 1 overline 2 overline 3 right with the following operations The sum x y displaystyle overline x overline y in Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z is the remainder when the integer x y is divided by 4 as x y is always smaller than 8 this remainder is either x y or x y 4 For example 2 3 1 displaystyle overline 2 overline 3 overline 1 and 3 3 2 displaystyle overline 3 overline 3 overline 2 The product x y displaystyle overline x cdot overline y in Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z is the remainder when the integer xy is divided by 4 For example 2 3 2 displaystyle overline 2 cdot overline 3 overline 2 and 3 3 1 displaystyle overline 3 cdot overline 3 overline 1 Then Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z is a ring each axiom follows from the corresponding axiom for Z displaystyle mathbb Z If x is an integer the remainder of x when divided by 4 may be considered as an element of Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z and this element is often denoted by x mod 4 or x displaystyle overline x which is consistent with the notation for 0 1 2 3 The additive inverse of any x displaystyle overline x in Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z is x x displaystyle overline x overline x For example 3 3 1 displaystyle overline 3 overline 3 overline 1 Example 2 by 2 matrices Edit The set of 2 by 2 square matrices with entries in a field F is 7 8 9 10 M 2 F a b c d a b c d F displaystyle operatorname M 2 F left left begin pmatrix a amp b c amp d end pmatrix right a b c d in F right With the operations of matrix addition and matrix multiplication M 2 F displaystyle operatorname M 2 F satisfies the above ring axioms The element 1 0 0 1 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 amp 0 0 amp 1 end smallmatrix right is the multiplicative identity of the ring If A 0 1 1 0 displaystyle A left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 1 1 amp 0 end smallmatrix right and B 0 1 0 0 displaystyle B left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 1 0 amp 0 end smallmatrix right then A B 0 0 0 1 displaystyle AB left begin smallmatrix 0 amp 0 0 amp 1 end smallmatrix right while B A 1 0 0 0 displaystyle BA left begin smallmatrix 1 amp 0 0 amp 0 end smallmatrix right this example shows that the ring is noncommutative More generally for any ring R commutative or not and any nonnegative integer n the square matrices of dimension n with entries in R form a ring see Matrix ring History EditSee also Ring theory History Richard Dedekind one of the founders of ring theory Dedekind Edit The study of rings originated from the theory of polynomial rings and the theory of algebraic integers 11 In 1871 Richard Dedekind defined the concept of the ring of integers of a number field 12 In this context he introduced the terms ideal inspired by Ernst Kummer s notion of ideal number and module and studied their properties Dedekind did not use the term ring and did not define the concept of a ring in a general setting Hilbert Edit The term Zahlring number ring was coined by David Hilbert in 1892 and published in 1897 13 In 19th century German the word Ring could mean association which is still used today in English in a limited sense for example spy ring 14 so if that were the etymology then it would be similar to the way group entered mathematics by being a non technical word for collection of related things According to Harvey Cohn Hilbert used the term for a ring that had the property of circling directly back to an element of itself in the sense of an equivalence 15 Specifically in a ring of algebraic integers all high powers of an algebraic integer can be written as an integral combination of a fixed set of lower powers and thus the powers cycle back For instance if a 3 4 a 1 0 displaystyle a 3 4a 1 0 then a 3 4 a 1 a 4 4 a 2 a a 5 a 2 16 a 4 a 6 16 a 2 8 a 1 a 7 8 a 2 65 a 16 displaystyle begin aligned a 3 amp 4a 1 a 4 amp 4a 2 a a 5 amp a 2 16a 4 a 6 amp 16a 2 8a 1 a 7 amp 8a 2 65a 16 vdots amp qquad vdots end aligned and so on in general an is going to be an integral linear combination of 1 a and a2 Fraenkel and Noether Edit The first axiomatic definition of a ring was given by Adolf Fraenkel in 1915 16 17 but his axioms were stricter than those in the modern definition For instance he required every non zero divisor to have a multiplicative inverse 18 In 1921 Emmy Noether gave a modern axiomatic definition of commutative rings with and without 1 and developed the foundations of commutative ring theory in her paper Idealtheorie in Ringbereichen 19 Multiplicative identity and the term ring Edit Fraenkel s axioms for a ring included that of a multiplicative identity 20 whereas Noether s did not 19 Most or all books on algebra 21 22 up to around 1960 followed Noether s convention of not requiring a 1 for a ring Starting in the 1960s it became increasingly common to see books including the existence of 1 in the definition of ring especially in advanced books by notable authors such as Artin 23 Atiyah and MacDonald 24 Bourbaki 25 Eisenbud 26 and Lang 27 There are also books published as late as 2006 that use the term without the requirement for a 1 28 29 30 Gardner and Wiegandt assert that when dealing with several objects in the category of rings as opposed to working with a fixed ring if one requires all rings to have a 1 then some consequences include the lack of existence of infinite direct sums of rings and that proper direct summands of rings are not subrings They conclude that in many maybe most branches of ring theory the requirement of the existence of a unity element is not sensible and therefore unacceptable 31 Poonen makes the counterargument that the natural notion for rings is the direct product rather than the direct sum He further argues that rings without a multiplicative identity are not totally associative the product of any finite sequence of ring elements including the empty sequence is well defined independent of the order of operations and writes the natural extension of associativity demands that rings should contain an empty product so it is natural to require rings to have a 1 32 Authors who follow either convention for the use of the term ring may use one of the following terms to refer to objects satisfying the other convention to include a requirement a multiplicative identity unital ring unitary ring unit ring ring with unity ring with identity ring with a unit 33 or ring with 1 34 to omit a requirement for a multiplicative identity rng 35 or pseudo ring 36 although the latter may be confusing because it also has other meanings Basic examples EditSee also Associative algebra Examples Commutative rings Edit The prototypical example is the ring of integers with the two operations of addition and multiplication The rational real and complex numbers are commutative rings of a type called fields A unital associative algebra over a commutative ring R is itself a ring as well as an R module Some examples The algebra R X of polynomials with coefficients in R The algebra R X 1 X n displaystyle R X 1 dots X n of formal power series with coefficients in R The set of all continuous real valued functions defined on the real line forms a commutative R displaystyle mathbb R algebra The operations are pointwise addition and multiplication of functions Let X be a set and let R be a ring Then the set of all functions from X to R forms a ring which is commutative if R is commutative The ring of continuous functions in the previous example is a subring of this ring if X is the real line and R R displaystyle R mathbb R The ring of quadratic integers the integral closure of Z displaystyle mathbb Z in a quadratic extension of Q displaystyle mathbb Q It is a subring of the ring of all algebraic integers The ring of profinite integers Z displaystyle widehat mathbb Z the infinite product of the rings of p adic integers Z p displaystyle mathbb Z p over all prime numbers p The Hecke ring the ring generated by Hecke operators If S is a set then the power set of S becomes a ring if we define addition to be the symmetric difference of sets and multiplication to be intersection This is an example of a Boolean ring Noncommutative rings Edit For any ring R and any natural number n the set of all square n by n matrices with entries from R forms a ring with matrix addition and matrix multiplication as operations For n 1 this matrix ring is isomorphic to R itself For n gt 1 and R not the zero ring this matrix ring is noncommutative If G is an abelian group then the endomorphisms of G form a ring the endomorphism ring End G of G The operations in this ring are addition and composition of endomorphisms More generally if V is a left module over a ring R then the set of all R linear maps forms a ring also called the endomorphism ring and denoted by EndR V The endomorphism ring of an elliptic curve It is a commutative ring if the elliptic curve is defined over a field of characteristic zero If G is a group and R is a ring the group ring of G over R is a free module over R having G as basis Multiplication is defined by the rules that the elements of G commute with the elements of R and multiply together as they do in the group G The ring of differential operators depending on the context In fact many rings that appear in analysis are noncommutative For example most Banach algebras are noncommutative Non rings Edit The set of natural numbers N displaystyle mathbb N with the usual operations is not a ring since N displaystyle mathbb N is not even a group not all the elements are invertible with respect to addition for instance there is no natural number which can be added to 3 to get 0 as a result There is a natural way to enlarge it to a ring by including negative numbers to produce the ring of integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z The natural numbers including 0 form an algebraic structure known as a semiring which has all of the axioms of a ring excluding that of an additive inverse Let R be the set of all continuous functions on the real line that vanish outside a bounded interval that depends on the function with addition as usual but with multiplication defined as convolution f g x f y g x y d y displaystyle f g x int infty infty f y g x y dy Then R is a rng but not a ring the Dirac delta function has the property of a multiplicative identity but it is not a function and hence is not an element of R Basic concepts EditProducts and powers Edit For each nonnegative integer n given a sequence a 1 a n displaystyle a 1 dots a n of n elements of R one can define the product P n i 1 n a i displaystyle P n prod i 1 n a i recursively let P 0 1 displaystyle P 0 1 and let P m P m 1 a m displaystyle P m P m 1 a m for 1 m n As a special case one can define nonnegative integer powers of an element a of a ring a0 1 and a n a n 1 a displaystyle a n a n 1 a for n 1 Then a m n a m a n displaystyle a m n a m a n for all m n 0 Elements in a ring Edit A left zero divisor of a ring R is an element a in the ring such that there exists a nonzero element b of R such that ab 0 c A right zero divisor is defined similarly A nilpotent element is an element a such that an 0 for some n gt 0 One example of a nilpotent element is a nilpotent matrix A nilpotent element in a nonzero ring is necessarily a zero divisor An idempotent e displaystyle e is an element such that e2 e One example of an idempotent element is a projection in linear algebra A unit is an element a having a multiplicative inverse in this case the inverse is unique and is denoted by a 1 The set of units of a ring is a group under ring multiplication this group is denoted by R or R or U R For example if R is the ring of all square matrices of size n over a field then R consists of the set of all invertible matrices of size n and is called the general linear group Subring Edit Main article Subring A subset S of R is called a subring if any one of the following equivalent conditions holds the addition and multiplication of R restrict to give operations S S S making S a ring with the same multiplicative identity as R 1 S and for all x y in S the elements xy x y and x are in S S can be equipped with operations making it a ring such that the inclusion map S R is a ring homomorphism For example the ring Z displaystyle mathbb Z of integers is a subring of the field of real numbers and also a subring of the ring of polynomials Z X displaystyle mathbb Z X in both cases Z displaystyle mathbb Z contains 1 which is the multiplicative identity of the larger rings On the other hand the subset of even integers 2 Z displaystyle 2 mathbb Z does not contain the identity element 1 and thus does not qualify as a subring of Z displaystyle mathbb Z one could call 2 Z displaystyle 2 mathbb Z a subrng however An intersection of subrings is a subring Given a subset E of R the smallest subring of R containing E is the intersection of all subrings of R containing E and it is called the subring generated by E For a ring R the smallest subring of R is called the characteristic subring of R It can be generated through addition of copies of 1 and 1 It is possible that n 1 1 1 1 displaystyle n cdot 1 1 1 ldots 1 n times can be zero If n is the smallest positive integer such that this occurs then n is called the characteristic of R In some rings n 1 is never zero for any positive integer n and those rings are said to have characteristic zero Given a ring R let Z R denote the set of all elements x in R such that x commutes with every element in R xy yx for any y in R Then Z R is a subring of R called the center of R More generally given a subset X of R let S be the set of all elements in R that commute with every element in X Then S is a subring of R called the centralizer or commutant of X The center is the centralizer of the entire ring R Elements or subsets of the center are said to be central in R they each individually generate a subring of the center Ideal Edit Main article Ideal ring theory Let R be a ring A left ideal of R is a nonempty subset I of R such that for any x y in I and r in R the elements x y and rx are in I If R I denotes the R span of I that is the set of finite sums r 1 x 1 r n x n such that r i R and x i I displaystyle r 1 x 1 cdots r n x n quad textrm such textrm that r i in R textrm and x i in I then I is a left ideal if R I I displaystyle RI subseteq I Similarly a right ideal is a subset I such that I R I displaystyle IR subseteq I A subset I is said to be a two sided ideal or simply ideal if it is both a left ideal and right ideal A one sided or two sided ideal is then an additive subgroup of R If E is a subset of R then R E is a left ideal called the left ideal generated by E it is the smallest left ideal containing E Similarly one can consider the right ideal or the two sided ideal generated by a subset of R If x is in R then Rx and xR are left ideals and right ideals respectively they are called the principal left ideals and right ideals generated by x The principal ideal RxR gt is written as x For example the set of all positive and negative multiples of 2 along with 0 form an ideal of the integers and this ideal is generated by the integer 2 In fact every ideal of the ring of integers is principal Like a group a ring is said to be simple if it is nonzero and it has no proper nonzero two sided ideals A commutative simple ring is precisely a field Rings are often studied with special conditions set upon their ideals For example a ring in which there is no strictly increasing infinite chain of left ideals is called a left Noetherian ring A ring in which there is no strictly decreasing infinite chain of left ideals is called a left Artinian ring It is a somewhat surprising fact that a left Artinian ring is left Noetherian the Hopkins Levitzki theorem The integers however form a Noetherian ring which is not Artinian For commutative rings the ideals generalize the classical notion of divisibility and decomposition of an integer into prime numbers in algebra A proper ideal P of R is called a prime ideal if for any elements x y R displaystyle x y in R we have that x y P displaystyle xy in P implies either x P displaystyle x in P or y P displaystyle y in P Equivalently P is prime if for any ideals I J displaystyle I J we have that I J P displaystyle IJ subseteq P implies either I P displaystyle I subseteq P or J P displaystyle J subseteq P This latter formulation illustrates the idea of ideals as generalizations of elements Homomorphism Edit Main article Ring homomorphism A homomorphism from a ring R to a ring S is a function f from R to S that preserves the ring operations namely such that for all a b in R the following identities hold f a b f a f b f a b f a f b f 1 R 1 S displaystyle begin aligned amp f a b f a ddagger f b amp f a cdot b f a f b amp f 1 R 1 S end aligned If one is working with rngs then the third condition is dropped A ring homomorphism f is said to be an isomorphism if there exists an inverse homomorphism to f that is a ring homomorphism that is an inverse function Any bijective ring homomorphism is a ring isomorphism Two rings R S are said to be isomorphic if there is an isomorphism between them and in that case one writes R S displaystyle R simeq S A ring homomorphism between the same ring is called an endomorphism and an isomorphism between the same ring an automorphism Examples The function that maps each integer x to its remainder modulo 4 a number in 0 1 2 3 is a homomorphism from the ring Z displaystyle mathbb Z to the quotient ring Z 4 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 4 mathbb Z quotient ring is defined below If u is a unit element in a ring R then R R x u x u 1 displaystyle R to R x mapsto uxu 1 is a ring homomorphism called an inner automorphism of R Let R be a commutative ring of prime characteristic p Then x x p displaystyle x to x p is a ring endomorphism of R called the Frobenius homomorphism The Galois group of a field extension L K is the set of all automorphisms of L whose restrictions to n are the identity For any ring R there are a unique ring homomorphism Z R displaystyle mathbb Z mapsto R and a unique ring homomorphism R 0 An epimorphism that is right cancelable morphism of rings need not be surjective For example the unique map Z Q displaystyle mathbb Z to mathbb Q is an epimorphism An algebra homomorphism from a k algebra to the endomorphism algebra of a vector space over k is called a representation of the algebra Given a ring homomorphism f R S the set of all elements mapped to 0 by f is called the kernel of f The kernel is a two sided ideal of R The image of f on the other hand is not always an ideal but it is always a subring of S To give a ring homomorphism from a commutative ring R to a ring A with image contained in the center of A is the same as to give a structure of an algebra over R to A which in particular gives a structure of an A module Quotient ring Edit Main article Quotient ring The notion of quotient ring is analogous to the notion of a quotient group Given a ring R and a two sided ideal I of R view I as subgroup of R then the quotient ring R I is the set of cosets of I together with the operations a I b I a b I a I b I a b I displaystyle begin aligned amp a I b I a b I amp a I b I ab I end aligned for all a b in R The ring R I is also called a factor ring As with a quotient group there is a canonical homomorphism p R R I given by x x I displaystyle x mapsto x I It is surjective and satisfies the following universal property If f R S is a ring homomorphism such that f I 0 then there is a unique homomorphism f R I S displaystyle overline f R I to S such that f f p displaystyle f overline f circ p For any ring homomorphism f R S invoking the universal property with I ker f produces a homomorphism f R ker f S displaystyle overline f R ker f to S that gives an isomorphism from R ker f to the image of f Module EditMain article Module mathematics The concept of a module over a ring generalizes the concept of a vector space over a field by generalizing from multiplication of vectors with elements of a field scalar multiplication to multiplication with elements of a ring More precisely given a ring R an R module M is an abelian group equipped with an operation R M M associating an element of M to every pair of an element of R and an element of M that satisfies certain axioms This operation is commonly denoted by juxtaposition and called multiplication The axioms of modules are the following for all a b in R and all x y in M M is an abelian group under addition a x y a x a y a b x a x b x 1 x x a b x a b x displaystyle begin aligned amp a x y ax ay amp a b x ax bx amp 1x x amp ab x a bx end aligned When the ring is noncommutative these axioms define left modules right modules are defined similarly by writing xa instead of ax This is not only a change of notation as the last axiom of right modules that is x ab xa b becomes ab x b ax if left multiplication by ring elements is used for a right module Basic examples of modules are ideals including the ring itself Although similarly defined the theory of modules is much more complicated than that of vector space mainly because unlike vector spaces modules are not characterized up to an isomorphism by a single invariant the dimension of a vector space In particular not all modules have a basis The axioms of modules imply that 1 x x where the first minus denotes the additive inverse in the ring and the second minus the additive inverse in the module Using this and denoting repeated addition by a multiplication by a positive integer allows identifying abelian groups with modules over the ring of integers Any ring homomorphism induces a structure of a module if f R S is a ring homomorphism then S is a left module over R by the multiplication rs f r s If R is commutative or if f R is contained in the center of S the ring S is called a R algebra In particular every ring is an algebra over the integers Constructions EditDirect product Edit Main article Direct product of rings Let R and S be rings Then the product R S can be equipped with the following natural ring structure r 1 s 1 r 2 s 2 r 1 r 2 s 1 s 2 r 1 s 1 r 2 s 2 r 1 r 2 s 1 s 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp r 1 s 1 r 2 s 2 r 1 r 2 s 1 s 2 amp r 1 s 1 cdot r 2 s 2 r 1 cdot r 2 s 1 cdot s 2 end aligned for all r1 r2 in R and s1 s2 in S The ring R S with the above operations of addition and multiplication and the multiplicative identity 1 1 is called the direct product of R with S The same construction also works for an arbitrary family of rings if Ri are rings indexed by a set I then i I R i textstyle prod i in I R i is a ring with componentwise addition and multiplication Let R be a commutative ring and a 1 a n displaystyle mathfrak a 1 cdots mathfrak a n be ideals such that a i a j 1 displaystyle mathfrak a i mathfrak a j 1 whenever i j Then the Chinese remainder theorem says there is a canonical ring isomorphism R i 1 n a i i 1 n R a i x mod i 1 n a i x mod a 1 x mod a n displaystyle R textstyle bigcap i 1 n mathfrak a i simeq prod i 1 n R mathfrak a i qquad x bmod textstyle bigcap i 1 n mathfrak a i mapsto x bmod mathfrak a 1 ldots x bmod mathfrak a n A finite direct product may also be viewed as a direct sum of ideals 37 Namely let R i 1 i n displaystyle R i 1 leq i leq n be rings R i R R i textstyle R i to R prod R i the inclusions with the images a i displaystyle mathfrak a i in particular a i displaystyle mathfrak a i are rings though not subrings Then a i displaystyle mathfrak a i are ideals of R andR a 1 a n a i a j 0 i j a i 2 a i displaystyle R mathfrak a 1 oplus cdots oplus mathfrak a n quad mathfrak a i mathfrak a j 0 i neq j quad mathfrak a i 2 subseteq mathfrak a i as a direct sum of abelian groups because for abelian groups finite products are the same as direct sums Clearly the direct sum of such ideals also defines a product of rings that is isomorphic to R Equivalently the above can be done through central idempotents Assume that R has the above decomposition Then we can write 1 e 1 e n e i a i displaystyle 1 e 1 cdots e n quad e i in mathfrak a i By the conditions on a i displaystyle mathfrak a i one has that ei are central idempotents and eiej 0 i j orthogonal Again one can reverse the construction Namely if one is given a partition of 1 in orthogonal central idempotents then let a i R e i displaystyle mathfrak a i Re i which are two sided ideals If each ei is not a sum of orthogonal central idempotents d then their direct sum is isomorphic to R An important application of an infinite direct product is the construction of a projective limit of rings see below Another application is a restricted product of a family of rings cf adele ring Polynomial ring Edit Main article Polynomial ring Given a symbol t called a variable and a commutative ring R the set of polynomials R t a n t n a n 1 t n 1 a 1 t a 0 n 0 a j R displaystyle R t left a n t n a n 1 t n 1 dots a 1 t a 0 mid n geq 0 a j in R right forms a commutative ring with the usual addition and multiplication containing R as a subring It is called the polynomial ring over R More generally the set R t 1 t n displaystyle R left t 1 ldots t n right of all polynomials in variables t 1 t n displaystyle t 1 ldots t n forms a commutative ring containing R t i displaystyle R left t i right as subrings If R is an integral domain then R t is also an integral domain its field of fractions is the field of rational functions If R is a Noetherian ring then R t is a Noetherian ring If R is a unique factorization domain then R t is a unique factorization domain Finally R is a field if and only if R t is a principal ideal domain Let R S displaystyle R subseteq S be commutative rings Given an element x of S one can consider the ring homomorphism R t S f f x displaystyle R t to S quad f mapsto f x that is the substitution If S R t and x t then f t f Because of this the polynomial f is often also denoted by f t The image of the map f f x displaystyle f mapsto f x is denoted by R x it is the same thing as the subring of S generated by R and x Example k t 2 t 3 displaystyle k left t 2 t 3 right denotes the image of the homomorphism k x y k t f f t 2 t 3 displaystyle k x y to k t f mapsto f left t 2 t 3 right In other words it is the subalgebra of k t generated by t2 and t3 Example let f be a polynomial in one variable that is an element in a polynomial ring R Then f x h is an element in R h and f x h f x is divisible by h in that ring The result of substituting zero to h in f x h f x h is f x the derivative of f at x The substitution is a special case of the universal property of a polynomial ring The property states given a ring homomorphism ϕ R S displaystyle phi R to S and an element x in S there exists a unique ring homomorphism ϕ R t S displaystyle overline phi R t to S such that ϕ t x displaystyle overline phi t x and ϕ displaystyle overline phi restricts to ϕ 38 For example choosing a basis a symmetric algebra satisfies the universal property and so is a polynomial ring To give an example let S be the ring of all functions from R to itself the addition and the multiplication are those of functions Let x be the identity function Each r in R defines a constant function giving rise to the homomorphism R S The universal property says that this map extends uniquely to R t S f f displaystyle R t to S quad f mapsto overline f t maps to x where f displaystyle overline f is the polynomial function defined by f The resulting map is injective if and only if R is infinite Given a non constant monic polynomial f in R t there exists a ring S containing R such that f is a product of linear factors in S t 39 Let k be an algebraically closed field The Hilbert s Nullstellensatz theorem of zeros states that there is a natural one to one correspondence between the set of all prime ideals in k t 1 t n displaystyle k left t 1 ldots t n right and the set of closed subvarieties of kn In particular many local problems in algebraic geometry may be attacked through the study of the generators of an ideal in a polynomial ring cf Grobner basis There are some other related constructions A formal power series ring R t displaystyle R t consists of formal power series 0 a i t i a i R displaystyle sum 0 infty a i t i quad a i in R together with multiplication and addition that mimic those for convergent series It contains R t as a subring A formal power series ring does not have the universal property of a polynomial ring a series may not converge after a substitution The important advantage of a formal power series ring over a polynomial ring is that it is local in fact complete Matrix ring and endomorphism ring Edit Main articles Matrix ring and Endomorphism ring Let R be a ring not necessarily commutative The set of all square matrices of size n with entries in R forms a ring with the entry wise addition and the usual matrix multiplication It is called the matrix ring and is denoted by Mn R Given a right R module U the set of all R linear maps from U to itself forms a ring with addition that is of function and multiplication that is of composition of functions it is called the endomorphism ring of U and is denoted by EndR U As in linear algebra a matrix ring may be canonically interpreted as an endomorphism ring End R R n M n R displaystyle operatorname End R R n simeq operatorname M n R This is a special case of the following fact If f 1 n U 1 n U displaystyle f oplus 1 n U to oplus 1 n U is an R linear map then f may be written as a matrix with entries fij in S EndR U resulting in the ring isomorphism End R 1 n U M n S f f i j displaystyle operatorname End R oplus 1 n U to operatorname M n S quad f mapsto f ij Any ring homomorphism R S induces Mn R Mn S 40 Schur s lemma says that if U is a simple right R module then EndR U is a division ring 41 If U i 1 r U i m i displaystyle U bigoplus i 1 r U i oplus m i is a direct sum of mi copies of simple R modules U i displaystyle U i then End R U i 1 r M m i End R U i displaystyle operatorname End R U simeq prod i 1 r operatorname M m i operatorname End R U i The Artin Wedderburn theorem states any semisimple ring cf below is of this form A ring R and the matrix ring Mn R over it are Morita equivalent the category of right modules of R is equivalent to the category of right modules over Mn R 40 In particular two sided ideals in R correspond in one to one to two sided ideals in Mn R Limits and colimits of rings Edit Let Ri be a sequence of rings such that Ri is a subring of Ri 1 for all i Then the union or filtered colimit of Ri is the ring lim R i displaystyle varinjlim R i defined as follows it is the disjoint union of all Ri s modulo the equivalence relation x y if and only if x y in Ri for sufficiently large i Examples of colimits A polynomial ring in infinitely many variables R t 1 t 2 lim R t 1 t 2 t m displaystyle R t 1 t 2 cdots varinjlim R t 1 t 2 cdots t m The algebraic closure of finite fields of the same characteristic F p lim F p m displaystyle overline mathbf F p varinjlim mathbf F p m The field of formal Laurent series over a field k k t lim t m k t displaystyle k t varinjlim t m k t it is the field of fractions of the formal power series ring k t displaystyle k t The function field of an algebraic variety over a field k is lim k U displaystyle varinjlim k U where the limit runs over all the coordinate rings k U of nonempty open subsets U more succinctly it is the stalk of the structure sheaf at the generic point Any commutative ring is the colimit of finitely generated subrings A projective limit or a filtered limit of rings is defined as follows Suppose we re given a family of rings Ri i running over positive integers say and ring homomorphisms Rj Ri j i such that Ri Ri are all the identities and Rk Rj Ri is Rk Ri whenever k j i Then lim R i displaystyle varprojlim R i is the subring of R i displaystyle textstyle prod R i consisting of xn such that xj maps to xi under Rj Ri j i For an example of a projective limit see Completion Localization Edit The localization generalizes the construction of the field of fractions of an integral domain to an arbitrary ring and modules Given a not necessarily commutative ring R and a subset S of R there exists a ring R S 1 displaystyle R S 1 together with the ring homomorphism R R S 1 displaystyle R to R left S 1 right that inverts S that is the homomorphism maps elements in S to unit elements in R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right and moreover any ring homomorphism from R that inverts S uniquely factors through R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right 42 The ring R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right is called the localization of R with respect to S For example if R is a commutative ring and f an element in R then the localization R f 1 displaystyle R left f 1 right consists of elements of the form r f n r R n 0 displaystyle r f n r in R n geq 0 to be precise R f 1 R t t f 1 displaystyle R left f 1 right R t tf 1 43 The localization is frequently applied to a commutative ring R with respect to the complement of a prime ideal or a union of prime ideals in R In that case S R p displaystyle S R mathfrak p one often writes R p displaystyle R mathfrak p for R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right R p displaystyle R mathfrak p is then a local ring with the maximal ideal p R p displaystyle mathfrak p R mathfrak p This is the reason for the terminology localization The field of fractions of an integral domain R is the localization of R at the prime ideal zero If p displaystyle mathfrak p is a prime ideal of a commutative ring R then the field of fractions of R p displaystyle R mathfrak p is the same as the residue field of the local ring R p displaystyle R mathfrak p and is denoted by k p displaystyle k mathfrak p If M is a left R module then the localization of M with respect to S is given by a change of rings M S 1 R S 1 R M displaystyle M left S 1 right R left S 1 right otimes R M The most important properties of localization are the following when R is a commutative ring and S a multiplicatively closed subset p p S 1 displaystyle mathfrak p mapsto mathfrak p left S 1 right is a bijection between the set of all prime ideals in R disjoint from S and the set of all prime ideals in R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right 44 R S 1 lim R f 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right varinjlim R left f 1 right f running over elements in S with partial ordering given by divisibility 45 The localization is exact 0 M S 1 M S 1 M S 1 0 displaystyle 0 to M left S 1 right to M left S 1 right to M left S 1 right to 0 is exact over R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right whenever 0 M M M 0 displaystyle 0 to M to M to M to 0 is exact over R Conversely if 0 M m M m M m 0 displaystyle 0 to M mathfrak m to M mathfrak m to M mathfrak m to 0 is exact for any maximal ideal m displaystyle mathfrak m then 0 M M M 0 displaystyle 0 to M to M to M to 0 is exact A remark localization is no help in proving a global existence One instance of this is that if two modules are isomorphic at all prime ideals it does not follow that they are isomorphic One way to explain this is that the localization allows one to view a module as a sheaf over prime ideals and a sheaf is inherently a local notion In category theory a localization of a category amounts to making some morphisms isomorphisms An element in a commutative ring R may be thought of as an endomorphism of any R module Thus categorically a localization of R with respect to a subset S of R is a functor from the category of R modules to itself that sends elements of S viewed as endomorphisms to automorphisms and is universal with respect to this property Of course R then maps to R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right and R modules map to R S 1 displaystyle R left S 1 right modules Completion Edit Let R be a commutative ring and let I be an ideal of R The completion of R at I is the projective limit R lim R I n displaystyle hat R varprojlim R I n it is a commutative ring The canonical homomorphisms from R to the quotients R I n displaystyle R I n induce a homomorphism R R displaystyle R to hat R The latter homomorphism is injective if R is a Noetherian integral domain and I is a proper ideal or if R is a Noetherian local ring with maximal ideal I by Krull s intersection theorem 46 The construction is especially useful when I is a maximal ideal The basic example is the completion of Z displaystyle mathbb Z at the principal ideal p generated by a prime number p it is called the ring of p adic integers and is denoted Z p displaystyle mathbb Z p The completion can in this case be constructed also from the p adic absolute value on Q displaystyle mathbb Q The p adic absolute value on Q displaystyle mathbb Q is a map x x displaystyle x mapsto x from Q displaystyle mathbb Q to R displaystyle mathbb R given by n p p v p n displaystyle n p p v p n where v p n displaystyle v p n denotes the exponent of p in the prime factorization of a nonzero integer n into prime numbers we also put 0 p 0 displaystyle 0 p 0 and m n p m p n p displaystyle m n p m p n p It defines a distance function on Q displaystyle mathbb Q and the completion of Q displaystyle mathbb Q as a metric space is denoted by Q p displaystyle mathbb Q p It is again a field since the field operations extend to the completion The subring of Q p displaystyle mathbb Q p consisting of elements x with x p 1 displaystyle x p leq 1 is isomorphic to Z p displaystyle mathbb Z p Similarly the formal power series ring R t is the completion of R t at t see also Hensel s lemma A complete ring has much simpler structure than a commutative ring This owns to the Cohen structure theorem which says roughly that a complete local ring tends to look like a formal power series ring or a quotient of it On the other hand the interaction between the integral closure and completion has been among the most important aspects that distinguish modern commutative ring theory from the classical one developed by the likes of Noether Pathological examples found by Nagata led to the reexamination of the roles of Noetherian rings and motivated among other things the definition of excellent ring Rings with generators and relations Edit The most general way to construct a ring is by specifying generators and relations Let F be a free ring that is free algebra over the integers with the set X of symbols that is F consists of polynomials with integral coefficients in noncommuting variables that are elements of X A free ring satisfies the universal property any function from the set X to a ring R factors through F so that F R is the unique ring homomorphism Just as in the group case every ring can be represented as a quotient of a free ring 47 Now we can impose relations among symbols in X by taking a quotient Explicitly if E is a subset of F then the quotient ring of F by the ideal generated by E is called the ring with generators X and relations E If we used a ring say A as a base ring instead of Z displaystyle mathbb Z then the resulting ring will be over A For example if E x y y x x y X displaystyle E xy yx mid x y in X then the resulting ring will be the usual polynomial ring with coefficients in A in variables that are elements of X It is also the same thing as the symmetric algebra over A with symbols X In the category theoretic terms the formation S the free ring generated by the set S displaystyle S mapsto text the free ring generated by the set S is the left adjoint functor of the forgetful functor from the category of rings to Set and it is often called the free ring functor Let A B be algebras over a commutative ring R Then the tensor product of R modules A R B displaystyle A otimes R B is an R algebra with multiplication characterized by x u y v x y u v displaystyle x otimes u y otimes v xy otimes uv See also Tensor product of algebras and Change of ringsSpecial kinds of rings EditDomains Edit A nonzero ring with no nonzero zero divisors is called a domain A commutative domain is called an integral domain The most important integral domains are principal ideal domains PIDs for short and fields A principal ideal domain is an integral domain in which every ideal is principal An important class of integral domains that contain a PID is a unique factorization domain UFD an integral domain in which every nonunit element is a product of prime elements an element is prime if it generates a prime ideal The fundamental question in algebraic number theory is on the extent to which the ring of generalized integers in a number field where an ideal admits prime factorization fails to be a PID Among theorems concerning a PID the most important one is the structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain The theorem may be illustrated by the following application to linear algebra 48 Let V be a finite dimensional vector space over a field k and f V V a linear map with minimal polynomial q Then since k t is a unique factorization domain q factors into powers of distinct irreducible polynomials that is prime elements q p 1 e 1 p s e s displaystyle q p 1 e 1 ldots p s e s Letting t v f v displaystyle t cdot v f v we make V a k t module The structure theorem then says V is a direct sum of cyclic modules each of which is isomorphic to the module of the form k t p i k j displaystyle k t left p i k j right Now if p i t t l i displaystyle p i t t lambda i then such a cyclic module for pi has a basis in which the restriction of f is represented by a Jordan matrix Thus if say k is algebraically closed then all pi s are of the form t li and the above decomposition corresponds to the Jordan canonical form of f In algebraic geometry UFDs arise because of smoothness More precisely a point in a variety over a perfect field is smooth if the local ring at the point is a regular local ring A regular local ring is a UFD 49 The following is a chain of class inclusions that describes the relationship between rings domains and fields rngs rings commutative rings integral domains integrally closed domains GCD domains unique factorization domains principal ideal domains Euclidean domains fields algebraically closed fieldsDivision ring Edit A division ring is a ring such that every non zero element is a unit A commutative division ring is a field A prominent example of a division ring that is not a field is the ring of quaternions Any centralizer in a division ring is also a division ring In particular the center of a division ring is a field It turned out that every finite domain in particular finite division ring is a field in particular commutative the Wedderburn s little theorem Every module over a division ring is a free module has a basis consequently much of linear algebra can be carried out over a division ring instead of a field The study of conjugacy classes figures prominently in the classical theory of division rings see for example the Cartan Brauer Hua theorem A cyclic algebra introduced by L E Dickson is a generalization of a quaternion algebra Semisimple rings Edit Main article Semisimple module A semisimple module is a direct sum of simple modules A semisimple ring is a ring that is semisimple as a left module or right module over itself Examples Edit A division ring is semisimple and simple For any division ring D and positive integer n the matrix ring Mn D is semisimple and simple For a field k and finite group G the group ring kG is semisimple if and only if the characteristic of k does not divide the order of G Maschke s theorem Clifford algebras are semisimple The Weyl algebra over a field is a simple ring but it is not semisimple The same holds for a ring of differential operators in many variables Properties Edit Any module over a semisimple ring is semisimple Proof A free module over a semisimple ring is semisimple and any module is a quotient of a free module For a ring R the following are equivalent R is semisimple R is artinian and semiprimitive R is a finite direct product i 1 r M n i D i textstyle prod i 1 r operatorname M n i D i where each ni is a positive integer and each Di is a division ring Artin Wedderburn theorem Semisimplicity is closely related to separability A unital associative algebra A over a field k is said to be separable if the base extension A k F displaystyle A otimes k F is semisimple for every field extension F k If A happens to be a field then this is equivalent to the usual definition in field theory cf separable extension Central simple algebra and Brauer group Edit Main article Central simple algebra For a field k a k algebra is central if its center is k and is simple if it is a simple ring Since the center of a simple k algebra is a field any simple k algebra is a central simple algebra over its center In this section a central simple algebra is assumed to have finite dimension Also we mostly fix the base field thus an algebra refers to a k algebra The matrix ring of size n over a ring R will be denoted by Rn The Skolem Noether theorem states any automorphism of a central simple algebra is inner Two central simple algebras A and B are said to be similar if there are integers n and m such that A k k n B k k m displaystyle A otimes k k n approx B otimes k k m 50 Since k n k k m k n m displaystyle k n otimes k k m simeq k nm the similarity is an equivalence relation The similarity classes A with the multiplication A B A k B displaystyle A B left A otimes k B right form an abelian group called the Brauer group of k and is denoted by Br k By the Artin Wedderburn theorem a central simple algebra is the matrix ring of a division ring thus each similarity class is represented by a unique division ring For example Br k is trivial if k is a finite field or an algebraically closed field more generally quasi algebraically closed field cf Tsen s theorem Br R displaystyle operatorname Br mathbb R has order 2 a special case of the theorem of Frobenius Finally if k is a nonarchimedean local field for example Q p displaystyle mathbb Q p then Br k Q Z displaystyle operatorname Br k mathbb Q mathbb Z through the invariant map Now if F is a field extension of k then the base extension k F displaystyle otimes k F induces Br k Br F Its kernel is denoted by Br F k It consists of A such that A k F displaystyle A otimes k F is a matrix ring over F that is A is split by F If the extension is finite and Galois then Br F k is canonically isomorphic to H 2 Gal F k k displaystyle H 2 left operatorname Gal F k k right 51 Azumaya algebras generalize the notion of central simple algebras to a commutative local ring Valuation ring Edit Main article Valuation ring If K is a field a valuation v is a group homomorphism from the multiplicative group K to a totally ordered abelian group G such that for any f g in K with f g nonzero v f g min v f v g The valuation ring of v is the subring of K consisting of zero and all nonzero f such that v f 0 Examples The field of formal Laurent series k t displaystyle k t over a field k comes with the valuation v such that v f is the least degree of a nonzero term in f the valuation ring of v is the formal power series ring k t displaystyle k t More generally given a field k and a totally ordered abelian group G let k G displaystyle k G be the set of all functions from G to k whose supports the sets of points at which the functions are nonzero are well ordered It is a field with the multiplication given by convolution f g t s G f s g t s displaystyle f g t sum s in G f s g t s It also comes with the valuation v such that v f is the least element in the support of f The subring consisting of elements with finite support is called the group ring of G which makes sense even if G is not commutative If G is the ring of integers then we recover the previous example by identifying f with the series whose n th coefficient is f n See also Novikov ring and uniserial ringRings with extra structure EditA ring may be viewed as an abelian group by using the addition operation with extra structure namely ring multiplication In the same way there are other mathematical objects which may be considered as rings with extra structure For example An associative algebra is a ring that is also a vector space over a field n such that the scalar multiplication is compatible with the ring multiplication For instance the set of n by n matrices over the real field R displaystyle mathbb R has dimension n2 as a real vector space A ring R is a topological ring if its set of elements R is given a topology which makes the addition map R R R displaystyle R times R to R and the multiplication map R R R displaystyle cdot R times R to R to be both continuous as maps between topological spaces where X X inherits the product topology or any other product in the category For example n by n matrices over the real numbers could be given either the Euclidean topology or the Zariski topology and in either case one would obtain a topological ring A l ring is a commutative ring R together with operations ln R R that are like n th exterior powers l n x y 0 n l i x l n i y displaystyle lambda n x y sum 0 n lambda i x lambda n i y dd For example Z displaystyle mathbb Z is a l ring with l n x x n displaystyle lambda n x binom x n the binomial coefficients The notion plays a central rule in the algebraic approach to the Riemann Roch theorem A totally ordered ring is a ring with a total ordering that is compatible with ring operations Some examples of the ubiquity of rings EditMany different kinds of mathematical objects can be fruitfully analyzed in terms of some associated ring Cohomology ring of a topological space Edit To any topological space X one can associate its integral cohomology ring H X Z i 0 H i X Z displaystyle H X mathbb Z bigoplus i 0 infty H i X mathbb Z a graded ring There are also homology groups H i X Z displaystyle H i X mathbb Z of a space and indeed these were defined first as a useful tool for distinguishing between certain pairs of topological spaces like the spheres and tori for which the methods of point set topology are not well suited Cohomology groups were later defined in terms of homology groups in a way which is roughly analogous to the dual of a vector space To know each individual integral homology group is essentially the same as knowing each individual integral cohomology group because of the universal coefficient theorem However the advantage of the cohomology groups is that there is a natural product which is analogous to the observation that one can multiply pointwise a k multilinear form and an l multilinear form to get a k l multilinear form The ring structure in cohomology provides the foundation for characteristic classes of fiber bundles intersection theory on manifolds and algebraic varieties Schubert calculus and much more Burnside ring of a group Edit To any group is associated its Burnside ring which uses a ring to describe the various ways the group can act on a finite set The Burnside ring s additive group is the free abelian group whose basis are the transitive actions of the group and whose addition is the disjoint union of the action Expressing an action in terms of the basis is decomposing an action into its transitive constituents The multiplication is easily expressed in terms of the representation ring the multiplication in the Burnside ring is formed by writing the tensor product of two permutation modules as a permutation module The ring structure allows a formal way of subtracting one action from another Since the Burnside ring is contained as a finite index subring of the representation ring one can pass easily from one to the other by extending the coefficients from integers to the rational numbers Representation ring of a group ring Edit To any group ring or Hopf algebra is associated its representation ring or Green ring The representation ring s additive group is the free abelian group whose basis are the indecomposable modules and whose addition corresponds to the direct sum Expressing a module in terms of the basis is finding an indecomposable decomposition of the module The multiplication is the tensor product When the algebra is semisimple the representation ring is just the character ring from character theory which is more or less the Grothendieck group given a ring structure Function field of an irreducible algebraic variety Edit To any irreducible algebraic variety is associated its function field The points of an algebraic variety correspond to valuation rings contained in the function field and containing the coordinate ring The study of algebraic geometry makes heavy use of commutative algebra to study geometric concepts in terms of ring theoretic properties Birational geometry studies maps between the subrings of the function field Face ring of a simplicial complex Edit Every simplicial complex has an associated face ring also called its Stanley Reisner ring This ring reflects many of the combinatorial properties of the simplicial complex so it is of particular interest in algebraic combinatorics In particular the algebraic geometry of the Stanley Reisner ring was used to characterize the numbers of faces in each dimension of simplicial polytopes Category theoretic description EditSee also Category of rings Every ring can be thought of as a monoid in Ab the category of abelian groups thought of as a monoidal category under the tensor product of Z displaystyle mathbb Z modules The monoid action of a ring R on an abelian group is simply an R module Essentially an R module is a generalization of the notion of a vector space where rather than a vector space over a field one has a vector space over a ring Let A be an abelian group and let End A be its endomorphism ring see above Note that essentially End A is the set of all morphisms of A where if f is in End A and g is in End A the following rules may be used to compute f g and f g f g x f x g x f g x f g x displaystyle begin aligned amp f g x f x g x amp f cdot g x f g x end aligned where as in f x g x is addition in A and function composition is denoted from right to left Therefore associated to any abelian group is a ring Conversely given any ring R R is an abelian group Furthermore for every r in R right or left multiplication by r gives rise to a morphism of R by right or left distributivity Let A R Consider those endomorphisms of A that factor through right or left multiplication of R In other words let EndR A be the set of all morphisms m of A having the property that m r x r m x It was seen that every r in R gives rise to a morphism of A right multiplication by r It is in fact true that this association of any element of R to a morphism of A as a function from R to EndR A is an isomorphism of rings In this sense therefore any ring can be viewed as the endomorphism ring of some abelian X group by X group it is meant a group with X being its set of operators 52 In essence the most general form of a ring is the endomorphism group of some abelian X group Any ring can be seen as a preadditive category with a single object It is therefore natural to consider arbitrary preadditive categories to be generalizations of rings And indeed many definitions and theorems originally given for rings can be translated to this more general context Additive functors between preadditive categories generalize the concept of ring homomorphism and ideals in additive categories can be defined as sets of morphisms closed under addition and under composition with arbitrary morphisms Generalization EditAlgebraists have defined structures more general than rings by weakening or dropping some of ring axioms Rng Edit A rng is the same as a ring except that the existence of a multiplicative identity is not assumed 53 Nonassociative ring Edit A nonassociative ring is an algebraic structure that satisfies all of the ring axioms except the associative property and the existence of a multiplicative identity A notable example is a Lie algebra There exists some structure theory for such algebras that generalizes the analogous results for Lie algebras and associative algebras citation needed Semiring Edit A semiring sometimes rig is obtained by weakening the assumption that R is an abelian group to the assumption that R is a commutative monoid and adding the axiom that 0 a a 0 0 for all a in R since it no longer follows from the other axioms Examples the non negative integers 0 1 2 displaystyle 0 1 2 ldots with ordinary addition and multiplication the tropical semiring Other ring like objects EditRing object in a category Edit Let C be a category with finite products Let pt denote a terminal object of C an empty product A ring object in C is an object R equipped with morphisms R R a R displaystyle R times R stackrel a to R addition R R m R displaystyle R times R stackrel m to R multiplication pt 0 R displaystyle operatorname pt stackrel 0 to R additive identity R i R displaystyle R stackrel i to R additive inverse and pt 1 R displaystyle operatorname pt stackrel 1 to R multiplicative identity satisfying the usual ring axioms Equivalently a ring object is an object R equipped with a factorization of its functor of points h R Hom R C op S e t s displaystyle h R operatorname Hom R C operatorname op to mathbf Sets through the category of rings C op R i n g s forgetful S e t s displaystyle C operatorname op to mathbf Rings stackrel textrm forgetful longrightarrow mathbf Sets Ring scheme Edit In algebraic geometry a ring scheme over a base scheme S is a ring object in the category of S schemes One example is the ring scheme Wn over Spec Z displaystyle operatorname Spec mathbb Z which for any commutative ring A returns the ring Wn A of p isotypic Witt vectors of length n over A 54 Ring spectrum Edit In algebraic topology a ring spectrum is a spectrum X together with a multiplication m X X X displaystyle mu X wedge X to X and a unit map S X from the sphere spectrum S such that the ring axiom diagrams commute up to homotopy In practice it is common to define a ring spectrum as a monoid object in a good category of spectra such as the category of symmetric spectra See also Edit Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Abstract Algebra Rings Algebra over a commutative ring Categorical ring Category of rings Glossary of ring theory Nonassociative ring Ring of sets Semiring Spectrum of a ring Simplicial commutative ring Special types of rings Boolean ring Dedekind ring Differential ring Exponential ring Finite ring Lie ring Local ring Noetherian and artinian rings Ordered ring Poisson ring Reduced ring Regular ring Ring of periods SBI ring Valuation ring and discrete valuation ringNotes Edit This means that each operation is defined and produces a unique result in R for each ordered pair of elements of R The existence of 1 is not assumed by some authors here the term rng is used if existence of a multiplicative identity is not assumed See next subsection Some other authors such as Lang further require a zero divisor to be nonzero Such a central idempotent is called centrally primitive Citations Edit Bourbaki 1989 p 96 Ch 1 8 1 Saunders Mac Lane Garrett Birkhoff 1967 Algebra AMS Chelsea p 85 Lang Serge 2002 Algebra Third ed Springer Verlag p 83 Isaacs 1994 p 160 Non associative rings and algebras Encyclopedia of Mathematics Isaacs 1994 p 161 Lam A first course on noncommutative rings 2nd edition Springer 2001 Theorem 3 1 Lang Undergraduate algebra Springer 2005 V 3 Serre Lie algebras and Lie groups 2nd edition corrected 5th printing Springer 2006 p 3 Serre Local fields Springer 1979 p 158 The development of Ring Theory Kleiner 1998 p 27 sfn error no target CITEREFKleiner1998 help Hilbert 1897 Why is a ring called a ring MathOverflow Cohn Harvey 1980 Advanced Number Theory New York Dover Publications p 49 ISBN 978 0 486 64023 5 Fraenkel 1915 pp 143 145 Jacobson 2009 p 86 footnote 1 Fraenkel 1915 p 144 axiom R 8 a b Noether 1921 p 29 Fraenkel 1915 p 144 axiom R7 van der Waerden 1930 Zariski amp Samuel 1958 Artin 2018 p 346 Atiyah amp MacDonald 1969 p 1 sfn error no target CITEREFAtiyahMacDonald1969 help Bourbaki 1989 p 96 Eisenbud p 11 sfn error no target CITEREFEisenbud help Lang p 83 sfn error no target CITEREFLang help Gallian 2006 p 235 Hungerford 1997 p 42 Warner 1965 p 188 Gardner amp Wiegandt 2003 Poonen 2018 Wilder 1965 p 176 Rotman 1998 p 7 Jacobson 2009 p 155 Bourbaki 1989 p 98 Cohn 2003 Theorem 4 5 1 Jacobson 1974 Theorem 2 10 sfn error no target CITEREFJacobson1974 help Bourbaki 1964 Ch 5 1 Lemma 2 a b Cohn 2003 4 4 Lang 2002 Ch XVII Proposition 1 1 Cohn 1995 Proposition 1 3 1 Eisenbud 2004 Exercise 2 2 sfn error no target CITEREFEisenbud2004 help Milne 2012 Proposition 6 4 sfn error no target CITEREFMilne2012 help Milne 2012 end of Chapter 7 sfn error no target CITEREFMilne2012 help Atiyah amp Macdonald 1969 Theorem 10 17 and its corollaries Cohn 1995 pg 242 Lang 2002 Ch XIV 2 Weibel Ch 1 Theorem 3 8 Milne amp CFT Ch IV 2 sfn error no target CITEREFMilneCFT help Serre J P Applications algebriques de la cohomologie des groupes I II Seminaire Henri Cartan 1950 51 1 Jacobson 2009 p 162 Theorem 3 2 Jacobson 2009 Serre p 44 References EditGeneral references Edit Artin Michael 2018 Algebra 2nd ed Pearson Atiyah Michael Macdonald Ian G 1969 Introduction to commutative algebra Addison Wesley Bourbaki N 1964 Algebre commutative Hermann Bourbaki N 1989 Algebra I Chapters 1 3 Springer Cohn Paul Moritz 2003 Basic algebra groups rings and fields Springer ISBN 978 1 85233 587 8 Eisenbud David 1995 Commutative algebra with a view toward algebraic geometry Springer Gallian Joseph A 2006 Contemporary Abstract Algebra Sixth Edition Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9780618514717 Gardner J W Wiegandt R 2003 Radical Theory of Rings Chapman amp Hall CRC Pure and Applied Mathematics ISBN 0824750330 Herstein I N 1994 reprint of the 1968 original Noncommutative rings Carus Mathematical Monographs Vol 15 With an afterword by Lance W Small Mathematical Association of America ISBN 0 88385 015 X Hungerford Thomas W 1997 Abstract Algebra an Introduction Second Edition Brooks Cole ISBN 9780030105593 Jacobson Nathan 2009 Basic algebra Vol 1 2nd ed Dover ISBN 978 0 486 47189 1 Jacobson Nathan 1964 Structure of rings American Mathematical Society Colloquium Publications Revised ed 37 Jacob, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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