Template:Short description Template:About Template:Distinguish

File:A portion of the lattice of ideals of Z illustrating prime, semiprime and primary ideals SVG.svg
A Hasse diagram of a portion of the lattice of ideals of the integers <math>\Z.</math> The purple nodes indicate prime ideals. The purple and green nodes are semiprime ideals, and the purple and blue nodes are primary ideals.

In algebra, a prime ideal is a subset of a ring that shares many important properties of a prime number in the ring of integers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The prime ideals for the integers are the sets that contain all the multiples of a given prime number, together with the zero ideal.

Primitive ideals are prime, and prime ideals are both primary and semiprime.

Prime ideals for commutative ringsEdit

DefinitionEdit

An ideal Template:Mvar of a commutative ring Template:Mvar is prime if it has the following two properties:

This generalizes the following property of prime numbers, known as Euclid's lemma: if Template:Math is a prime number and if Template:Math divides a product Template:Math of two integers, then Template:Math divides Template:Math or Template:Math divides Template:Math. We can therefore say

A positive integer Template:Mvar is a prime number if and only if <math>n\Z</math> is a prime ideal in <math>\Z.</math>

ExamplesEdit

Non-examplesEdit

<math>\Complex[x,y] \to \frac{\Complex[x,y]}{(x^2 + y^2 - 1)} \to \frac{\Complex[x,y]}{(x^2 + y^2 - 1, x)}</math>
Although the first two rings are integral domains (in fact the first is a UFD) the last is not an integral domain since it is isomorphic to
<math>\frac{\Complex[x,y]}{(x^2 + y^2 - 1, x)} \cong \frac{\Complex[y]}{(y^2 - 1)} \cong \Complex\times\Complex</math>
since <math>(y^2 - 1)</math> factors into <math>(y - 1)(y + 1)</math>, which implies the existence of zero divisors in the quotient ring, preventing it from being isomorphic to <math>\Complex</math> and instead to non-integral domain <math>\Complex\times\Complex</math> (by the Chinese remainder theorem).
This shows that the ideal <math>(x^2 + y^2 - 1, x) \subset \Complex[x,y]</math> is not prime. (See the first property listed below.)
  • Another non-example is the ideal <math>(2,x^2 + 5) \subset \Z[x]</math> since we have
<math>x^2+5 -2\cdot 3=(x-1)(x+1)\in (2,x^2+5)</math>
but neither <math>x-1</math> nor <math>x+1</math> are elements of the ideal.

PropertiesEdit

UsesEdit

One use of prime ideals occurs in algebraic geometry, where varieties are defined as the zero sets of ideals in polynomial rings. It turns out that the irreducible varieties correspond to prime ideals. In the modern abstract approach, one starts with an arbitrary commutative ring and turns the set of its prime ideals, also called its spectrum, into a topological space and can thus define generalizations of varieties called schemes, which find applications not only in geometry, but also in number theory.

The introduction of prime ideals in algebraic number theory was a major step forward: it was realized that the important property of unique factorisation expressed in the fundamental theorem of arithmetic does not hold in every ring of algebraic integers, but a substitute was found when Richard Dedekind replaced elements by ideals and prime elements by prime ideals; see Dedekind domain.

Prime ideals for noncommutative ringsEdit

The notion of a prime ideal can be generalized to noncommutative rings by using the commutative definition "ideal-wise". Wolfgang Krull advanced this idea in 1928.<ref>Krull, Wolfgang, Primidealketten in allgemeinen Ringbereichen, Sitzungsberichte Heidelberg. Akad. Wissenschaft (1928), 7. Abhandl.,3-14.</ref> The following content can be found in texts such as Goodearl's<ref>Goodearl, An Introduction to Noncommutative Noetherian Rings</ref> and Lam's.<ref>Lam, First Course in Noncommutative Rings</ref> If Template:Mvar is a (possibly noncommutative) ring and Template:Mvar is a proper ideal of Template:Mvar, we say that Template:Mvar is prime if for any two ideals Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar of Template:Mvar:

It can be shown that this definition is equivalent to the commutative one in commutative rings. It is readily verified that if an ideal of a noncommutative ring Template:Mvar satisfies the commutative definition of prime, then it also satisfies the noncommutative version. An ideal Template:Mvar satisfying the commutative definition of prime is sometimes called a completely prime ideal to distinguish it from other merely prime ideals in the ring. Completely prime ideals are prime ideals, but the converse is not true. For example, the zero ideal in the ring of Template:Math matrices over a field is a prime ideal, but it is not completely prime.

This is close to the historical point of view of ideals as ideal numbers, as for the ring <math>\Z</math> "Template:Mvar is contained in Template:Mvar" is another way of saying "Template:Mvar divides Template:Mvar", and the unit ideal Template:Mvar represents unity.

Equivalent formulations of the ideal Template:Math being prime include the following properties:

Prime ideals in commutative rings are characterized by having multiplicatively closed complements in Template:Mvar, and with slight modification, a similar characterization can be formulated for prime ideals in noncommutative rings. A nonempty subset Template:Math is called an m-system if for any Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar, there exists Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar such that Template:Math is in Template:Mvar.<ref>Obviously, multiplicatively closed sets are m-systems.</ref> The following item can then be added to the list of equivalent conditions above:

ExamplesEdit

Important factsEdit

Connection to maximalityEdit

Prime ideals can frequently be produced as maximal elements of certain collections of ideals. For example:

  • An ideal maximal with respect to having empty intersection with a fixed m-system is prime.
  • An ideal maximal among annihilators of submodules of a fixed Template:Mvar-module Template:Mvar is prime.
  • In a commutative ring, an ideal maximal with respect to being non-principal is prime.<ref>Kaplansky Commutative rings, p. 10, Ex 10.</ref>
  • In a commutative ring, an ideal maximal with respect to being not countably generated is prime.<ref>Kaplansky Commutative rings, p. 10, Ex 11.</ref>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

Further readingEdit