Special Ideals and Domains
Special Ideals and Domains
Introduction
The properties of a ring are often reflected in the types of ideals it contains. We now explore a "zoo" of special ideals and the well-behaved rings they define.
Prime and Maximal Ideals
Definitions
Definition 10.1: Let
- A proper ideal
is a prime ideal if for any , whenever , then either or . - A proper ideal
is a maximal ideal if there is no other ideal such that .
Characterizations
These definitions have elegant characterizations in terms of quotient rings:
- An ideal
is prime if and only if the quotient ring is an integral domain (a commutative ring with no zero divisors). - An ideal
is maximal if and only if the quotient ring is a field.
Since every field is an integral domain, it follows that every maximal ideal is also a prime ideal. The converse is not always true; for example, in the ring of integers
Examples
Example 1: In
Example 2: In
The Chinese Remainder Theorem
The Chinese Remainder Theorem is a classical result in number theory that can be elegantly generalized to the language of ring theory. It provides a powerful tool for solving systems of congruences.
Statement
Theorem 10.2 (Chinese Remainder Theorem for Rings): Let
defined by
Since for pairwise coprime ideals, their intersection is equal to their product, we have
Applications
The Chinese Remainder Theorem is fundamental in number theory and has applications in:
- Solving systems of congruences
- Understanding the structure of rings
- Cryptography (RSA algorithm)
- Error-correcting codes
Special Types of Domains
We now focus on integral domains with increasingly strong properties related to their ideal structure.
Principal Ideal Domains (PIDs)
Definition 10.3: An integral domain
Euclidean Domains (EDs)
Definition 10.4: An integral domain
The existence of a division algorithm in Euclidean domains makes their structure particularly transparent. For example:
- The integers
(with norm ) - Polynomial rings over a field
(with norm )
are both Euclidean domains. It can be shown that every Euclidean domain is a PID, but the converse is not true.
Relationship Between Domains
The relationship between the classes of domains introduced so far is a beautiful hierarchy:
Each implication is strict, meaning there are examples of PIDs that are not EDs, and UFDs that are not PIDs. For example,
Examples
Example 1: The Ring of Integers
The ring
Example 2: Polynomial Rings over Fields
For any field
Example 3: Gaussian Integers
The ring of Gaussian integers
Example 4: A PID that is not Euclidean
The ring
Applications
Application 1: Number Theory
The Chinese Remainder Theorem is fundamental in number theory for solving systems of congruences. For example, to solve the system:
We can use the Chinese Remainder Theorem to find a solution modulo
Application 2: Algebraic Number Theory
PIDs and Euclidean domains are important in algebraic number theory for understanding the structure of rings of integers in number fields.
Application 3: Cryptography
The Chinese Remainder Theorem is used in the RSA cryptosystem and other cryptographic protocols.
Advanced Topics
Dedekind Domains
A Dedekind domain is an integral domain where every non-zero proper ideal factors uniquely into a product of prime ideals. Dedekind domains are important in algebraic number theory and include:
- Rings of integers in number fields
- Coordinate rings of smooth affine curves
Noetherian Rings
A ring
- Fields
- Principal ideal domains
- Polynomial rings over Noetherian rings
- Rings of integers in number fields
Krull Domains
A Krull domain is an integral domain that is the intersection of a family of discrete valuation rings. Krull domains generalize the concept of unique factorization to more general settings.
Summary
Special ideals and domains provide a rich framework for understanding the structure of rings. Prime and maximal ideals correspond to integral domains and fields in quotient rings, respectively. The Chinese Remainder Theorem provides a powerful tool for understanding the structure of rings with multiple ideals.
The hierarchy of domains (Euclidean