Ring Homomorphisms

Ring Homomorphisms

Introduction

Ring homomorphisms are structure-preserving maps between rings, analogous to group homomorphisms in group theory. They are fundamental to understanding the relationships between different rings and provide the foundation for isomorphism theorems.

Definition

A ring homomorphism is a map ϕ:RS between two rings that preserves both addition and multiplication:

Properties

Kernel and Image

For a ring homomorphism ϕ:RS:

Injectivity and Surjectivity

Composition

The composition of two ring homomorphisms is again a ring homomorphism.

Examples

Example 1: Evaluation Homomorphism

Consider the homomorphism ϕ:Z[x]Z defined by ϕ(f(x))=f(0). Then:

Example 2: Reduction Modulo n

The map ϕ:ZZ/nZ defined by ϕ(a)=a+nZ is a ring homomorphism with kernel nZ.

Example 3: Complex Conjugation

The map ϕ:CC defined by ϕ(a+bi)=abi is a ring homomorphism.

Example 4: Matrix Trace

The map tr:Mn(R)R defined by tr(A)=i=1naii is a ring homomorphism.

First Isomorphism Theorem for Rings

Theorem: Let ϕ:RS be a ring homomorphism. Then:

R/ker(ϕ)Im(ϕ)

Proof Sketch

The proof involves:

  1. Defining a map ψ:R/ker(ϕ)Im(ϕ) by ψ(a+ker(ϕ))=ϕ(a)
  2. Showing that ψ is well-defined
  3. Proving that ψ is a ring homomorphism
  4. Establishing that ψ is bijective

Applications

Application 1: Quotient Ring Construction

The First Isomorphism Theorem is fundamental for understanding quotient rings and their properties.

Application 2: Ring Classification

Ring homomorphisms help classify rings by establishing relationships between different ring structures.

Application 3: Field Extensions

Ring homomorphisms are crucial in field theory for understanding field extensions and embeddings.

Application 4: Algebraic Geometry

Ring homomorphisms correspond to geometric maps, establishing the connection between algebra and geometry.

Special Types of Homomorphisms

Isomorphisms

A ring isomorphism is a bijective ring homomorphism. Two rings are isomorphic if there exists an isomorphism between them.

Endomorphisms and Automorphisms

Embeddings

A ring embedding is an injective ring homomorphism, which allows us to view one ring as a subring of another.