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Prime element
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{{short description|Analogue of a prime number in a commutative ring}} In [[mathematics]], specifically in [[abstract algebra]], a '''prime element''' of a [[commutative ring]] is an object satisfying certain properties similar to the [[prime number]]s in the [[integer]]s and to [[irreducible polynomial]]s. Care should be taken to distinguish prime elements from [[irreducible element]]s, a concept that is the same in [[unique factorization domain|UFD]]s but not the same in general. ==Definition== An element {{mvar|p}} of a commutative ring {{mvar|R}} is said to be '''prime''' if it is not the [[zero element]] or a [[unit (ring theory)|unit]] and whenever {{mvar|p}} [[Divisibility (ring theory)|divides]] {{mvar|ab}} for some {{mvar|a}} and {{mvar|b}} in {{mvar|R}}, then {{mvar|p}} divides {{mvar|a}} or {{mvar|p}} divides {{mvar|b}}. With this definition, [[Euclid's lemma]] is the assertion that [[prime number]]s are prime elements in the [[ring of integers]]. Equivalently, an element {{mvar|p}} is prime if, and only if, the [[principal ideal]] {{math|(''p'')}} generated by {{mvar|p}} is a nonzero [[prime ideal]].<ref>{{harvnb|Hungerford|1980|loc=Theorem III.3.4(i)}}, as indicated in the remark below the theorem and the proof, the result holds in full generality.</ref> (Note that in an [[integral domain]], the ideal {{math|(0)}} is a [[prime ideal]], but {{math|0}} is an exception in the definition of 'prime element'.) Interest in prime elements comes from the [[fundamental theorem of arithmetic]], which asserts that each nonzero integer can be written in essentially only one way as 1 or β1 multiplied by a product of positive prime numbers. This led to the study of [[unique factorization domain]]s, which generalize what was just illustrated in the integers. Being prime is relative to which ring an element is considered to be in; for example, 2 is a prime element in {{math|'''Z'''}} but it is not in {{math|'''Z'''[''i'']}}, the ring of [[Gaussian integers]], since {{math|1=2 = (1 + ''i'')(1 β ''i'')}} and 2 does not divide any factor on the right. ==Connection with prime ideals== {{Main|Prime ideal}} An ideal {{math|''I''}} in the ring {{math|''R''}} (with unity) is [[prime ideal|prime]] if the factor ring {{math|''R''/''I''}} is an [[integral domain]]. Equivalently, {{math|''I''}} is prime if whenever <math>ab \in I</math> then either <math>a \in I</math> or <math>b \in I</math>. In an integral domain, a nonzero [[principal ideal]] is [[prime ideal|prime]] if and only if it is generated by a prime element. ==Irreducible elements== {{Main|Irreducible element}} Prime elements should not be confused with [[irreducible element]]s. In an [[integral domain]], every prime is irreducible<ref>{{harvnb|Hungerford|1980|loc=Theorem III.3.4(iii)}}</ref> but the converse is not true in general. However, in unique factorization domains,<ref>{{harvnb|Hungerford|1980|loc=Remark after Definition III.3.5}}</ref> or more generally in [[GCD domain]]s, primes and irreducibles are the same. ==Examples== The following are examples of prime elements in rings: * The integers {{math|Β±2}}, {{math|Β±3}}, {{math|Β±5}}, {{math|Β±7}}, {{math|Β±11}}, ... in the [[ring of integers]] {{math|'''Z'''}} * the complex numbers {{math|(1 + ''i'')}}, {{math|19}}, and {{math|(2 + 3''i'')}} in the ring of [[Gaussian integers]] {{math|'''Z'''[''i'']}} * the polynomials {{math|''x''<sup>2</sup> β 2}} and {{math|''x''<sup>2</sup> + 1}} in {{math|'''Z'''[''x'']}}, the [[ring of polynomials]] over {{math|'''Z'''}}. * 2 in the [[quotient ring]] {{math|'''Z'''/6'''Z'''}} * {{math|''x''<sup>2</sup> + (''x''<sup>2</sup> + ''x'')}} is prime but not irreducible in the ring {{math|'''Q'''[''x'']/(''x''<sup>2</sup> + ''x'')}} * In the ring {{math|'''Z'''<sup>2</sup>}} of pairs of integers, {{math|(1, 0)}} is prime but not irreducible (one has {{math|1=(1, 0)<sup>2</sup> = (1, 0)}}). * In the [[ring of algebraic integers]] <math>\mathbf Z[\sqrt{-5}],</math> the element {{math|3}} is irreducible but not prime (as 3 divides <math>9=(2+\sqrt{-5})(2-\sqrt{-5})</math> and 3 does not divide any factor on the right). ==References== ;Notes {{reflist}} ;Sources *Section III.3 of {{Citation | authorlink=Thomas W. Hungerford | last=Hungerford | first=Thomas W. | title=Algebra | edition=Reprint of 1974 | year=1980 | publisher=[[Springer-Verlag]] | location=New York | series=[[Graduate Texts in Mathematics]] | volume=73 | isbn=978-0-387-90518-1 | mr=0600654 }} *{{citation |author=[[Nathan Jacobson|Jacobson, Nathan]] |title=Basic algebra. II |edition=2 |publisher=W. H. Freeman and Company |place=New York |year=1989 |pages=xviii+686 |isbn=0-7167-1933-9 |mr=1009787}} *{{citation |author=[[Irving Kaplansky|Kaplansky, Irving]] |title=Commutative rings |publisher=Allyn and Bacon Inc. |place=Boston, Mass. |year=1970 |pages=x+180 |mr=0254021 }} [[Category:Ring theory]]
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