
In mathematics, and more specifically in ring theory, an ideal of a ring is a special subset of its elements. Ideals generalize certain subsets of the integers, such as the even numbers or the multiples of 3. Addition and subtraction of even numbers preserves evenness, and multiplying an even number by any integer (even or odd) results in an even number; these closure and absorption properties are the defining properties of an ideal. An ideal can be used to construct a quotient ring in a way similar to how, in group theory, a normal subgroup can be used to construct a quotient group.
Among the integers, the ideals correspond one-for-one with the non-negative integers: in this ring, every ideal is a principal ideal consisting of the multiples of a single non-negative number. However, in other rings, the ideals may not correspond directly to the ring elements, and certain properties of integers, when generalized to rings, attach more naturally to the ideals than to the elements of the ring. For instance, the prime ideals of a ring are analogous to prime numbers, and the Chinese remainder theorem can be generalized to ideals. There is a version of unique prime factorization for the ideals of a Dedekind domain (a type of ring important in number theory).
The related, but distinct, concept of an ideal in order theory is derived from the notion of ideal in ring theory. A fractional ideal is a generalization of an ideal, and the usual ideals are sometimes called integral ideals for clarity.
History
Ernst Kummer invented the concept of ideal numbers to serve as the "missing" factors in number rings in which unique factorization fails; here the word "ideal" is in the sense of existing in imagination only, in analogy with "ideal" objects in geometry such as points at infinity. In 1876, Richard Dedekind replaced Kummer's undefined concept by concrete sets of numbers, sets that he called ideals, in the third edition of Dirichlet's book Vorlesungen über Zahlentheorie, to which Dedekind had added many supplements. Later the notion was extended beyond number rings to the setting of polynomial rings and other commutative rings by David Hilbert and especially Emmy Noether.
Definitions
Given a ring R, a left ideal is a subset I of R that is a subgroup of the additive group of that "absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of
"; that is,
is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions:
is a subgroup of
,
- For every
and every
, the product
is in
.
In other words, a left ideal is a left submodule of R, considered as a left module over itself.
A right ideal is defined similarly, with the condition replaced by
. A two-sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal.
If the ring is commutative, the three definitions are the same, and one talks simply of an ideal. In the non-commutative case, "ideal" is often used instead of "two-sided ideal".
If I is a left, right or two-sided ideal, the relation if and only if
is an equivalence relation on R, and the set of equivalence classes forms a left, right or bi module denoted and called the quotient of R by I. (It is an instance of a congruence relation and is a generalization of modular arithmetic.)
If the ideal I is two-sided, is a ring, and the function
that associates to each element of R its equivalence class is a surjective ring homomorphism that has the ideal as its kernel. Conversely, the kernel of a ring homomorphism is a two-sided ideal. Therefore, the two-sided ideals are exactly the kernels of ring homomorphisms.
Note on convention
By convention, a ring has the multiplicative identity. But some authors do not require a ring to have the multiplicative identity; i.e., for them, a ring is a rng. For a rng R, a left ideal I is a subrng with the additional property that is in I for every
and every
. (Right and two-sided ideals are defined similarly.) For a ring, an ideal I (say a left ideal) is rarely a subring; since a subring shares the same multiplicative identity with the ambient ring R, if I were a subring, for every
, we have
i.e.,
.
The notion of an ideal does not involve associativity; thus, an ideal is also defined for non-associative rings (often without the multiplicative identity) such as a Lie algebra.
Examples and properties
(For the sake of brevity, some results are stated only for left ideals but are usually also true for right ideals with appropriate notation changes.)
- In a ring R, the set R itself forms a two-sided ideal of R called the unit ideal. It is often also denoted by
since it is precisely the two-sided ideal generated (see below) by the unity
. Also, the set
consisting of only the additive identity 0R forms a two-sided ideal called the zero ideal and is denoted by
. Every (left, right or two-sided) ideal contains the zero ideal and is contained in the unit ideal.
- An (left, right or two-sided) ideal that is not the unit ideal is called a proper ideal (as it is a proper subset). Note: a left ideal
is proper if and only if it does not contain a unit element, since if
is a unit element, then
for every
. Typically there are plenty of proper ideals. In fact, if R is a skew-field, then
are its only ideals and conversely: that is, a nonzero ring R is a skew-field if
are the only left (or right) ideals. (Proof: if
is a nonzero element, then the principal left ideal
(see below) is nonzero and thus
; i.e.,
for some nonzero
. Likewise,
for some nonzero
. Then
.)
- The even integers form an ideal in the ring
of all integers, since the sum of any two even integers is even, and the product of any integer with an even integer is also even; this ideal is usually denoted by
. More generally, the set of all integers divisible by a fixed integer
is an ideal denoted
. In fact, every non-zero ideal of the ring
is generated by its smallest positive element, as a consequence of Euclidean division, so
is a principal ideal domain.
- The set of all polynomials with real coefficients that are divisible by the polynomial
is an ideal in the ring of all real-coefficient polynomials
.
- Take a ring
and positive integer
. For each
, the set of all
matrices with entries in
whose
-th row is zero is a right ideal in the ring
of all
matrices with entries in
. It is not a left ideal. Similarly, for each
, the set of all
matrices whose
-th column is zero is a left ideal but not a right ideal.
- The ring
of all continuous functions
from
to
under pointwise multiplication contains the ideal of all continuous functions
such that
. Another ideal in
is given by those functions that vanish for large enough arguments, i.e. those continuous functions
for which there exists a number
such that
whenever
.
- A ring is called a simple ring if it is nonzero and has no two-sided ideals other than
. Thus, a skew-field is simple and a simple commutative ring is a field. The matrix ring over a skew-field is a simple ring.
- If
is a ring homomorphism, then the kernel
is a two-sided ideal of
. By definition,
, and thus if
is not the zero ring (so
), then
is a proper ideal. More generally, for each left ideal I of S, the pre-image
is a left ideal. If I is a left ideal of R, then
is a left ideal of the subring
of S: unless f is surjective,
need not be an ideal of S; see also #Extension and contraction of an ideal below.
- Ideal correspondence: Given a surjective ring homomorphism
, there is a bijective order-preserving correspondence between the left (resp. right, two-sided) ideals of
containing the kernel of
and the left (resp. right, two-sided) ideals of
: the correspondence is given by
and the pre-image
. Moreover, for commutative rings, this bijective correspondence restricts to prime ideals, maximal ideals, and radical ideals (see the Types of ideals section for the definitions of these ideals).
- (For those who know modules) If M is a left R-module and
a subset, then the annihilator
of S is a left ideal. Given ideals
of a commutative ring R, the R-annihilator of
is an ideal of R called the ideal quotient of
by
and is denoted by
; it is an instance of idealizer in commutative algebra.
- Let
be an ascending chain of left ideals in a ring R; i.e.,
is a totally ordered set and
for each
. Then the union
is a left ideal of R. (Note: this fact remains true even if R is without the unity 1.)
- The above fact together with Zorn's lemma proves the following: if
is a possibly empty subset and
is a left ideal that is disjoint from E, then there is an ideal that is maximal among the ideals containing
and disjoint from E. (Again this is still valid if the ring R lacks the unity 1.) When
, taking
and
, in particular, there exists a left ideal that is maximal among proper left ideals (often simply called a maximal left ideal); see Krull's theorem for more.
- An arbitrary union of ideals need not be an ideal, but the following is still true: given a possibly empty subset X of R, there is the smallest left ideal containing X, called the left ideal generated by X and is denoted by
. Such an ideal exists since it is the intersection of all left ideals containing X. Equivalently,
is the set of all the (finite) left R-linear combinations of elements of X over R:
- (since such a span is the smallest left ideal containing X.) A right (resp. two-sided) ideal generated by X is defined in the similar way. For "two-sided", one has to use linear combinations from both sides; i.e.,
- A left (resp. right, two-sided) ideal generated by a single element x is called the principal left (resp. right, two-sided) ideal generated by x and is denoted by
(resp.
). The principal two-sided ideal
is often also denoted by
. If
is a finite set, then
is also written as
.
- There is a bijective correspondence between ideals and congruence relations (equivalence relations that respect the ring structure) on the ring: Given an ideal
of a ring
, let
if
. Then
is a congruence relation on
. Conversely, given a congruence relation
on
, let
. Then
is an ideal of
.
Types of ideals
To simplify the description all rings are assumed to be commutative. The non-commutative case is discussed in detail in the respective articles.
Ideals are important because they appear as kernels of ring homomorphisms and allow one to define factor rings. Different types of ideals are studied because they can be used to construct different types of factor rings.
- Maximal ideal: A proper ideal I is called a maximal ideal if there exists no other proper ideal J with I a proper subset of J. The factor ring of a maximal ideal is a simple ring in general and is a field for commutative rings.
- Minimal ideal: A nonzero ideal is called minimal if it contains no other nonzero ideal.
- Zero ideal: the ideal
.
- Unit ideal: the whole ring (being the ideal generated by
).
- Prime ideal: A proper ideal
is called a prime ideal if for any
and
in
, if
is in
, then at least one of
and
is in
. The factor ring of a prime ideal is a prime ring in general and is an integral domain for commutative rings.
- Radical ideal or semiprime ideal: A proper ideal I is called radical or semiprime if for any a in
, if an is in I for some n, then a is in I. The factor ring of a radical ideal is a semiprime ring for general rings, and is a reduced ring for commutative rings.
- Primary ideal: An ideal I is called a primary ideal if for all a and b in R, if ab is in I, then at least one of a and bn is in I for some natural number n. Every prime ideal is primary, but not conversely. A semiprime primary ideal is prime.
- Principal ideal: An ideal generated by one element.
- Finitely generated ideal: This type of ideal is finitely generated as a module.
- Primitive ideal: A left primitive ideal is the annihilator of a simple left module.
- Irreducible ideal: An ideal is said to be irreducible if it cannot be written as an intersection of ideals that properly contain it.
- Comaximal ideals: Two ideals I, J are said to be comaximal if
for some
and
.
- Regular ideal: This term has multiple uses. See the article for a list.
- Nil ideal: An ideal is a nil ideal if each of its elements is nilpotent.
- Nilpotent ideal: Some power of it is zero.
- Parameter ideal: an ideal generated by a system of parameters.
- Perfect ideal: A proper ideal I in a Noetherian ring
is called a perfect ideal if its grade equals the projective dimension of the associated quotient ring,
. A perfect ideal is unmixed.
- Unmixed ideal: A proper ideal I in a Noetherian ring
is called an unmixed ideal (in height) if the height of I is equal to the height of every associated prime P of
. (This is stronger than saying that
is equidimensional. See also equidimensional ring.
Two other important terms using "ideal" are not always ideals of their ring. See their respective articles for details:
- Fractional ideal: This is usually defined when
is a commutative domain with quotient field
. Despite their names, fractional ideals are
submodules of
with a special property. If the fractional ideal is contained entirely in
, then it is truly an ideal of
.
- Invertible ideal: Usually an invertible ideal A is defined as a fractional ideal for which there is another fractional ideal B such that AB = BA = R. Some authors may also apply "invertible ideal" to ordinary ring ideals A and B with AB = BA = R in rings other than domains.
Ideal operations
The sum and product of ideals are defined as follows. For and
, left (resp. right) ideals of a ring R, their sum is
,
which is a left (resp. right) ideal, and, if are two-sided,
i.e. the product is the ideal generated by all products of the form ab with a in and b in
.
Note is the smallest left (resp. right) ideal containing both
and
(or the union
), while the product
is contained in the intersection of
and
.
The distributive law holds for two-sided ideals ,
-
,
-
.
If a product is replaced by an intersection, a partial distributive law holds:
where the equality holds if contains
or
.
Remark: The sum and the intersection of ideals is again an ideal; with these two operations as join and meet, the set of all ideals of a given ring forms a complete modular lattice. The lattice is not, in general, a distributive lattice. The three operations of intersection, sum (or join), and product make the set of ideals of a commutative ring into a quantale.
If are ideals of a commutative ring R, then
in the following two cases (at least)
is generated by elements that form a regular sequence modulo
.
(More generally, the difference between a product and an intersection of ideals is measured by the Tor functor: .)
An integral domain is called a Dedekind domain if for each pair of ideals , there is an ideal
such that
. It can then be shown that every nonzero ideal of a Dedekind domain can be uniquely written as a product of maximal ideals, a generalization of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic.
Examples of ideal operations
In we have
since is the set of integers that are divisible by both
and
.
Let and let
. Then,
and
while
In the first computation, we see the general pattern for taking the sum of two finitely generated ideals, it is the ideal generated by the union of their generators. In the last three we observe that products and intersections agree whenever the two ideals intersect in the zero ideal. These computations can be checked using Macaulay2.
Radical of a ring
Ideals appear naturally in the study of modules, especially in the form of a radical.
- For simplicity, we work with commutative rings but, with some changes, the results are also true for non-commutative rings.
Let R be a commutative ring. By definition, a primitive ideal of R is the annihilator of a (nonzero) simple R-module. The Jacobson radical of R is the intersection of all primitive ideals. Equivalently,
Indeed, if is a simple module and x is a nonzero element in M, then
and
, meaning
is a maximal ideal. Conversely, if
is a maximal ideal, then
is the annihilator of the simple R-module
. There is also another characterization (the proof is not hard):
For a not-necessarily-commutative ring, it is a general fact that is a unit element if and only if
is (see the link) and so this last characterization shows that the radical can be defined both in terms of left and right primitive ideals.
The following simple but important fact (Nakayama's lemma) is built-in to the definition of a Jacobson radical: if M is a module such that , then M does not admit a maximal submodule, since if there is a maximal submodule
,
and so
, a contradiction. Since a nonzero finitely generated module admits a maximal submodule, in particular, one has:
- If
and M is finitely generated, then
.
A maximal ideal is a prime ideal and so one has
where the intersection on the left is called the nilradical of R. As it turns out, is also the set of nilpotent elements of R.
If R is an Artinian ring, then is nilpotent and
. (Proof: first note the DCC implies
for some n. If (DCC)
is an ideal properly minimal over the latter, then
. That is,
, a contradiction.)
Extension and contraction of an ideal
Let A and B be two commutative rings, and let f : A → B be a ring homomorphism. If is an ideal in A, then
need not be an ideal in B (e.g. take f to be the inclusion of the ring of integers Z into the field of rationals Q). The extension
of
in B is defined to be the ideal in B generated by
. Explicitly,
If is an ideal of B, then
is always an ideal of A, called the contraction
of
to A.
Assuming f : A → B is a ring homomorphism, is an ideal in A,
is an ideal in B, then:
is prime in B
is prime in A.
It is false, in general, that being prime (or maximal) in A implies that
is prime (or maximal) in B. Many classic examples of this stem from algebraic number theory. For example, embedding
. In
, the element 2 factors as
where (one can show) neither of
are units in B. So
is not prime in B (and therefore not maximal, as well). Indeed,
shows that
,
, and therefore
.
On the other hand, if f is surjective and then:
and
.
is a prime ideal in A
is a prime ideal in B.
is a maximal ideal in A
is a maximal ideal in B.
Remark: Let K be a field extension of L, and let B and A be the rings of integers of K and L, respectively. Then B is an integral extension of A, and we let f be the inclusion map from A to B. The behaviour of a prime ideal of A under extension is one of the central problems of algebraic number theory.
The following is sometimes useful: a prime ideal is a contraction of a prime ideal if and only if
. (Proof: Assuming the latter, note
intersects
, a contradiction. Now, the prime ideals of
correspond to those in B that are disjoint from
. Hence, there is a prime ideal
of B, disjoint from
, such that
is a maximal ideal containing
. One then checks that
lies over
. The converse is obvious.)
Generalizations
Ideals can be generalized to any monoid object , where
is the object where the monoid structure has been forgotten. A left ideal of
is a subobject
that "absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of
"; that is,
is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions:
is a subobject of
- For every
and every
, the product
is in
.
A right ideal is defined with the condition "" replaced by "'
". A two-sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal, and is sometimes simply called an ideal. When
is a commutative monoid object respectively, the definitions of left, right, and two-sided ideal coincide, and the term ideal is used alone.
An ideal can also be thought of as a specific type of R-module. If we consider as a left
-module (by left multiplication), then a left ideal
is really just a left sub-module of
. In other words,
is a left (right) ideal of
if and only if it is a left (right)
-module that is a subset of
.
is a two-sided ideal if it is a sub-
-bimodule of
.
Example: If we let , an ideal of
is an abelian group that is a subset of
, i.e.
for some
. So these give all the ideals of
.
See also
- Modular arithmetic
- Noether isomorphism theorem
- Boolean prime ideal theorem
- Ideal theory
- Ideal (order theory)
- Ideal norm
- Splitting of prime ideals in Galois extensions
- Ideal sheaf
Notes
- Some authors call the zero and unit ideals of a ring R the trivial ideals of R.
- If R does not have a unit, then the internal descriptions above must be modified slightly. In addition to the finite sums of products of things in X with things in R, we must allow the addition of n-fold sums of the form x + x + ... + x, and n-fold sums of the form (−x) + (−x) + ... + (−x) for every x in X and every n in the natural numbers. When R has a unit, this extra requirement becomes superfluous.
References
- John Stillwell (2010). Mathematics and its history. p. 439.
- Harold M. Edwards (1977). Fermat's last theorem. A genetic introduction to algebraic number theory. p. 76.
- Everest G., Ward T. (2005). An introduction to number theory. p. 83.
- Dummit & Foote 2004, p. 242
- Dummit & Foote 2004, § 10.1., Examples (1).
- Dummit & Foote 2004, § 10.1., Proposition 3.
- Dummit & Foote 2004, Ch. 7, Proposition 6.
- Dummit & Foote 2004, Ch. 7, Theorem 7.
- Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 243.
- Lang 2005, Section III.2
- Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 244.
- Because simple commutative rings are fields. See Lam (2001). A First Course in Noncommutative Rings. p. 39.
- "Zero ideal". Math World. 22 Aug 2024.
- Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 255.
- Dummit & Foote (2004), p. 251.
- Matsumura, Hideyuki (1987). Commutative Ring Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 132. ISBN 9781139171762.
- Eisenbud 1995, Exercise A 3.17
- Milnor (1971), p. 9.
- "ideals". www.math.uiuc.edu. Archived from the original on 2017-01-16. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
- "sums, products, and powers of ideals". www.math.uiuc.edu. Archived from the original on 2017-01-16. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
- "intersection of ideals". www.math.uiuc.edu. Archived from the original on 2017-01-16. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
- Atiyah & Macdonald (1969), Proposition 3.16.
- Atiyah, Michael F.; Macdonald, Ian G. (1969). Introduction to Commutative Algebra. Perseus Books. ISBN 0-201-00361-9.
- Dummit, David Steven; Foote, Richard Martin (2004). Abstract algebra (Third ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 9780471433347.
- Eisenbud, David (1995), Commutative Algebra with a View toward Algebraic Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 150, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, doi:10.1007/978-1-4612-5350-1, ISBN 978-0-387-94268-1, MR 1322960
- Lang, Serge (2005). Undergraduate Algebra (Third ed.). Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-22025-3.
- Hazewinkel, Michiel; Gubareni, Nadiya; Gubareni, Nadezhda Mikhaĭlovna; Kirichenko, Vladimir V. (2004). Algebras, rings and modules. Vol. 1. Springer. ISBN 1-4020-2690-0.
- Milnor, John Willard (1971). Introduction to algebraic K-theory. Annals of Mathematics Studies. Vol. 72. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691081014. MR 0349811. Zbl 0237.18005.
External links
- Levinson, Jake (July 14, 2014). "The Geometric Interpretation for Extension of Ideals?". Stack Exchange.
In mathematics and more specifically in ring theory an ideal of a ring is a special subset of its elements Ideals generalize certain subsets of the integers such as the even numbers or the multiples of 3 Addition and subtraction of even numbers preserves evenness and multiplying an even number by any integer even or odd results in an even number these closure and absorption properties are the defining properties of an ideal An ideal can be used to construct a quotient ring in a way similar to how in group theory a normal subgroup can be used to construct a quotient group Among the integers the ideals correspond one for one with the non negative integers in this ring every ideal is a principal ideal consisting of the multiples of a single non negative number However in other rings the ideals may not correspond directly to the ring elements and certain properties of integers when generalized to rings attach more naturally to the ideals than to the elements of the ring For instance the prime ideals of a ring are analogous to prime numbers and the Chinese remainder theorem can be generalized to ideals There is a version of unique prime factorization for the ideals of a Dedekind domain a type of ring important in number theory The related but distinct concept of an ideal in order theory is derived from the notion of ideal in ring theory A fractional ideal is a generalization of an ideal and the usual ideals are sometimes called integral ideals for clarity HistoryErnst Kummer invented the concept of ideal numbers to serve as the missing factors in number rings in which unique factorization fails here the word ideal is in the sense of existing in imagination only in analogy with ideal objects in geometry such as points at infinity In 1876 Richard Dedekind replaced Kummer s undefined concept by concrete sets of numbers sets that he called ideals in the third edition of Dirichlet s book Vorlesungen uber Zahlentheorie to which Dedekind had added many supplements Later the notion was extended beyond number rings to the setting of polynomial rings and other commutative rings by David Hilbert and especially Emmy Noether DefinitionsGiven a ring R a left ideal is a subset I of R that is a subgroup of the additive group of R displaystyle R that absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of R displaystyle R that is I displaystyle I is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions I displaystyle I is a subgroup of R displaystyle R For every r R displaystyle r in R and every x I displaystyle x in I the product rx displaystyle rx is in I displaystyle I In other words a left ideal is a left submodule of R considered as a left module over itself A right ideal is defined similarly with the condition rx I displaystyle rx in I replaced by xr I displaystyle xr in I A two sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal If the ring is commutative the three definitions are the same and one talks simply of an ideal In the non commutative case ideal is often used instead of two sided ideal If I is a left right or two sided ideal the relation x y displaystyle x sim y if and only if x y I displaystyle x y in I is an equivalence relation on R and the set of equivalence classes forms a left right or bi module denoted R I displaystyle R I and called the quotient of R by I It is an instance of a congruence relation and is a generalization of modular arithmetic If the ideal I is two sided R I displaystyle R I is a ring and the function R R I displaystyle R to R I that associates to each element of R its equivalence class is a surjective ring homomorphism that has the ideal as its kernel Conversely the kernel of a ring homomorphism is a two sided ideal Therefore the two sided ideals are exactly the kernels of ring homomorphisms Note on convention By convention a ring has the multiplicative identity But some authors do not require a ring to have the multiplicative identity i e for them a ring is a rng For a rng R a left ideal I is a subrng with the additional property that rx displaystyle rx is in I for every r R displaystyle r in R and every x I displaystyle x in I Right and two sided ideals are defined similarly For a ring an ideal I say a left ideal is rarely a subring since a subring shares the same multiplicative identity with the ambient ring R if I were a subring for every r R displaystyle r in R we have r r1 I displaystyle r r1 in I i e I R displaystyle I R The notion of an ideal does not involve associativity thus an ideal is also defined for non associative rings often without the multiplicative identity such as a Lie algebra Examples and properties For the sake of brevity some results are stated only for left ideals but are usually also true for right ideals with appropriate notation changes In a ring R the set R itself forms a two sided ideal of R called the unit ideal It is often also denoted by 1 displaystyle 1 since it is precisely the two sided ideal generated see below by the unity 1R displaystyle 1 R Also the set 0R displaystyle 0 R consisting of only the additive identity 0R forms a two sided ideal called the zero ideal and is denoted by 0 displaystyle 0 Every left right or two sided ideal contains the zero ideal and is contained in the unit ideal An left right or two sided ideal that is not the unit ideal is called a proper ideal as it is a proper subset Note a left ideal a displaystyle mathfrak a is proper if and only if it does not contain a unit element since if u a displaystyle u in mathfrak a is a unit element then r ru 1 u a displaystyle r ru 1 u in mathfrak a for every r R displaystyle r in R Typically there are plenty of proper ideals In fact if R is a skew field then 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 are its only ideals and conversely that is a nonzero ring R is a skew field if 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 are the only left or right ideals Proof if x displaystyle x is a nonzero element then the principal left ideal Rx displaystyle Rx see below is nonzero and thus Rx 1 displaystyle Rx 1 i e yx 1 displaystyle yx 1 for some nonzero y displaystyle y Likewise zy 1 displaystyle zy 1 for some nonzero z displaystyle z Then z z yx zy x x displaystyle z z yx zy x x The even integers form an ideal in the ring Z displaystyle mathbb Z of all integers since the sum of any two even integers is even and the product of any integer with an even integer is also even this ideal is usually denoted by 2Z displaystyle 2 mathbb Z More generally the set of all integers divisible by a fixed integer n displaystyle n is an ideal denoted nZ displaystyle n mathbb Z In fact every non zero ideal of the ring Z displaystyle mathbb Z is generated by its smallest positive element as a consequence of Euclidean division so Z displaystyle mathbb Z is a principal ideal domain The set of all polynomials with real coefficients that are divisible by the polynomial x2 1 displaystyle x 2 1 is an ideal in the ring of all real coefficient polynomials R x displaystyle mathbb R x Take a ring R displaystyle R and positive integer n displaystyle n For each 1 i n displaystyle 1 leq i leq n the set of all n n displaystyle n times n matrices with entries in R displaystyle R whose i displaystyle i th row is zero is a right ideal in the ring Mn R displaystyle M n R of all n n displaystyle n times n matrices with entries in R displaystyle R It is not a left ideal Similarly for each 1 j n displaystyle 1 leq j leq n the set of all n n displaystyle n times n matrices whose j displaystyle j th column is zero is a left ideal but not a right ideal The ring C R displaystyle C mathbb R of all continuous functions f displaystyle f from R displaystyle mathbb R to R displaystyle mathbb R under pointwise multiplication contains the ideal of all continuous functions f displaystyle f such that f 1 0 displaystyle f 1 0 Another ideal in C R displaystyle C mathbb R is given by those functions that vanish for large enough arguments i e those continuous functions f displaystyle f for which there exists a number L gt 0 displaystyle L gt 0 such that f x 0 displaystyle f x 0 whenever x gt L displaystyle vert x vert gt L A ring is called a simple ring if it is nonzero and has no two sided ideals other than 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 Thus a skew field is simple and a simple commutative ring is a field The matrix ring over a skew field is a simple ring If f R S displaystyle f R to S is a ring homomorphism then the kernel ker f f 1 0S displaystyle ker f f 1 0 S is a two sided ideal of R displaystyle R By definition f 1R 1S displaystyle f 1 R 1 S and thus if S displaystyle S is not the zero ring so 1S 0S displaystyle 1 S neq 0 S then ker f displaystyle ker f is a proper ideal More generally for each left ideal I of S the pre image f 1 I displaystyle f 1 I is a left ideal If I is a left ideal of R then f I displaystyle f I is a left ideal of the subring f R displaystyle f R of S unless f is surjective f I displaystyle f I need not be an ideal of S see also Extension and contraction of an ideal below Ideal correspondence Given a surjective ring homomorphism f R S displaystyle f R to S there is a bijective order preserving correspondence between the left resp right two sided ideals of R displaystyle R containing the kernel of f displaystyle f and the left resp right two sided ideals of S displaystyle S the correspondence is given by I f I displaystyle I mapsto f I and the pre image J f 1 J displaystyle J mapsto f 1 J Moreover for commutative rings this bijective correspondence restricts to prime ideals maximal ideals and radical ideals see the Types of ideals section for the definitions of these ideals For those who know modules If M is a left R module and S M displaystyle S subset M a subset then the annihilator AnnR S r R rs 0 s S displaystyle operatorname Ann R S r in R mid rs 0 s in S of S is a left ideal Given ideals a b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b of a commutative ring R the R annihilator of b a a displaystyle mathfrak b mathfrak a mathfrak a is an ideal of R called the ideal quotient of a displaystyle mathfrak a by b displaystyle mathfrak b and is denoted by a b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b it is an instance of idealizer in commutative algebra Let ai i S displaystyle mathfrak a i i in S be an ascending chain of left ideals in a ring R i e S displaystyle S is a totally ordered set and ai aj displaystyle mathfrak a i subset mathfrak a j for each i lt j displaystyle i lt j Then the union i Sai displaystyle textstyle bigcup i in S mathfrak a i is a left ideal of R Note this fact remains true even if R is without the unity 1 The above fact together with Zorn s lemma proves the following if E R displaystyle E subset R is a possibly empty subset and a0 R displaystyle mathfrak a 0 subset R is a left ideal that is disjoint from E then there is an ideal that is maximal among the ideals containing a0 displaystyle mathfrak a 0 and disjoint from E Again this is still valid if the ring R lacks the unity 1 When R 0 displaystyle R neq 0 taking a0 0 displaystyle mathfrak a 0 0 and E 1 displaystyle E 1 in particular there exists a left ideal that is maximal among proper left ideals often simply called a maximal left ideal see Krull s theorem for more An arbitrary union of ideals need not be an ideal but the following is still true given a possibly empty subset X of R there is the smallest left ideal containing X called the left ideal generated by X and is denoted by RX displaystyle RX Such an ideal exists since it is the intersection of all left ideals containing X Equivalently RX displaystyle RX is the set of all the finite left R linear combinations of elements of X over R RX r1x1 rnxn n N ri R xi X displaystyle RX r 1 x 1 dots r n x n mid n in mathbb N r i in R x i in X since such a span is the smallest left ideal containing X A right resp two sided ideal generated by X is defined in the similar way For two sided one has to use linear combinations from both sides i e RXR r1x1s1 rnxnsn n N ri R si R xi X displaystyle RXR r 1 x 1 s 1 dots r n x n s n mid n in mathbb N r i in R s i in R x i in X dd A left resp right two sided ideal generated by a single element x is called the principal left resp right two sided ideal generated by x and is denoted by Rx displaystyle Rx resp xR RxR displaystyle xR RxR The principal two sided ideal RxR displaystyle RxR is often also denoted by x displaystyle x If X x1 xn displaystyle X x 1 dots x n is a finite set then RXR displaystyle RXR is also written as x1 xn displaystyle x 1 dots x n There is a bijective correspondence between ideals and congruence relations equivalence relations that respect the ring structure on the ring Given an ideal I displaystyle I of a ring R displaystyle R let x y displaystyle x sim y if x y I displaystyle x y in I Then displaystyle sim is a congruence relation on R displaystyle R Conversely given a congruence relation displaystyle sim on R displaystyle R let I x R x 0 displaystyle I x in R x sim 0 Then I displaystyle I is an ideal of R displaystyle R Types of idealsTo simplify the description all rings are assumed to be commutative The non commutative case is discussed in detail in the respective articles Ideals are important because they appear as kernels of ring homomorphisms and allow one to define factor rings Different types of ideals are studied because they can be used to construct different types of factor rings Maximal ideal A proper ideal I is called a maximal ideal if there exists no other proper ideal J with I a proper subset of J The factor ring of a maximal ideal is a simple ring in general and is a field for commutative rings Minimal ideal A nonzero ideal is called minimal if it contains no other nonzero ideal Zero ideal the ideal 0 displaystyle 0 Unit ideal the whole ring being the ideal generated by 1 displaystyle 1 Prime ideal A proper ideal I displaystyle I is called a prime ideal if for any a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b in R displaystyle R if ab displaystyle ab is in I displaystyle I then at least one of a displaystyle a and b displaystyle b is in I displaystyle I The factor ring of a prime ideal is a prime ring in general and is an integral domain for commutative rings Radical ideal or semiprime ideal A proper ideal I is called radical or semiprime if for any a in R displaystyle R if an is in I for some n then a is in I The factor ring of a radical ideal is a semiprime ring for general rings and is a reduced ring for commutative rings Primary ideal An ideal I is called a primary ideal if for all a and b in R if ab is in I then at least one of a and bn is in I for some natural number n Every prime ideal is primary but not conversely A semiprime primary ideal is prime Principal ideal An ideal generated by one element Finitely generated ideal This type of ideal is finitely generated as a module Primitive ideal A left primitive ideal is the annihilator of a simple left module Irreducible ideal An ideal is said to be irreducible if it cannot be written as an intersection of ideals that properly contain it Comaximal ideals Two ideals I J are said to be comaximal if x y 1 displaystyle x y 1 for some x I displaystyle x in I and y J displaystyle y in J Regular ideal This term has multiple uses See the article for a list Nil ideal An ideal is a nil ideal if each of its elements is nilpotent Nilpotent ideal Some power of it is zero Parameter ideal an ideal generated by a system of parameters Perfect ideal A proper ideal I in a Noetherian ring R displaystyle R is called a perfect ideal if its grade equals the projective dimension of the associated quotient ring grade I projdim R I displaystyle textrm grade I textrm proj dim R I A perfect ideal is unmixed Unmixed ideal A proper ideal I in a Noetherian ring R displaystyle R is called an unmixed ideal in height if the height of I is equal to the height of every associated prime P of R I displaystyle R I This is stronger than saying that R I displaystyle R I is equidimensional See also equidimensional ring Two other important terms using ideal are not always ideals of their ring See their respective articles for details Fractional ideal This is usually defined when R displaystyle R is a commutative domain with quotient field K displaystyle K Despite their names fractional ideals are R displaystyle R submodules of K displaystyle K with a special property If the fractional ideal is contained entirely in R displaystyle R then it is truly an ideal of R displaystyle R Invertible ideal Usually an invertible ideal A is defined as a fractional ideal for which there is another fractional ideal B such that AB BA R Some authors may also apply invertible ideal to ordinary ring ideals A and B with AB BA R in rings other than domains Ideal operationsThe sum and product of ideals are defined as follows For a displaystyle mathfrak a and b displaystyle mathfrak b left resp right ideals of a ring R their sum is a b a b a a and b b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b a b mid a in mathfrak a mbox and b in mathfrak b which is a left resp right ideal and if a b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b are two sided ab a1b1 anbn ai a and bi b i 1 2 n for n 1 2 displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b a 1 b 1 dots a n b n mid a i in mathfrak a mbox and b i in mathfrak b i 1 2 dots n mbox for n 1 2 dots i e the product is the ideal generated by all products of the form ab with a in a displaystyle mathfrak a and b in b displaystyle mathfrak b Note a b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b is the smallest left resp right ideal containing both a displaystyle mathfrak a and b displaystyle mathfrak b or the union a b displaystyle mathfrak a cup mathfrak b while the product ab displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b is contained in the intersection of a displaystyle mathfrak a and b displaystyle mathfrak b The distributive law holds for two sided ideals a b c displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b mathfrak c a b c ab ac displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b mathfrak c mathfrak a mathfrak b mathfrak a mathfrak c a b c ac bc displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b mathfrak c mathfrak a mathfrak c mathfrak b mathfrak c If a product is replaced by an intersection a partial distributive law holds a b c a b a c displaystyle mathfrak a cap mathfrak b mathfrak c supset mathfrak a cap mathfrak b mathfrak a cap mathfrak c where the equality holds if a displaystyle mathfrak a contains b displaystyle mathfrak b or c displaystyle mathfrak c Remark The sum and the intersection of ideals is again an ideal with these two operations as join and meet the set of all ideals of a given ring forms a complete modular lattice The lattice is not in general a distributive lattice The three operations of intersection sum or join and product make the set of ideals of a commutative ring into a quantale If a b displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b are ideals of a commutative ring R then a b ab displaystyle mathfrak a cap mathfrak b mathfrak a mathfrak b in the following two cases at least a b 1 displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b 1 a displaystyle mathfrak a is generated by elements that form a regular sequence modulo b displaystyle mathfrak b More generally the difference between a product and an intersection of ideals is measured by the Tor functor Tor1R R a R b a b ab displaystyle operatorname Tor 1 R R mathfrak a R mathfrak b mathfrak a cap mathfrak b mathfrak a mathfrak b An integral domain is called a Dedekind domain if for each pair of ideals a b displaystyle mathfrak a subset mathfrak b there is an ideal c displaystyle mathfrak c such that a bc displaystyle mathfrak mathfrak a mathfrak b mathfrak c It can then be shown that every nonzero ideal of a Dedekind domain can be uniquely written as a product of maximal ideals a generalization of the fundamental theorem of arithmetic Examples of ideal operationsIn Z displaystyle mathbb Z we have n m lcm n m Z displaystyle n cap m operatorname lcm n m mathbb Z since n m displaystyle n cap m is the set of integers that are divisible by both n displaystyle n and m displaystyle m Let R C x y z w displaystyle R mathbb C x y z w and let a z w b x z y w c x z w displaystyle mathfrak a z w mathfrak b x z y w mathfrak c x z w Then a b z w x z y w x y z w displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b z w x z y w x y z w and a c z w x displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak c z w x ab z x z z y w w x z w y w z2 xz zy wz wx wz wy w2 displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak b z x z z y w w x z w y w z 2 xz zy wz wx wz wy w 2 ac xz z2 zw xw zw w2 displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak c xz z 2 zw xw zw w 2 a b ab displaystyle mathfrak a cap mathfrak b mathfrak a mathfrak b while a c w xz z2 ac displaystyle mathfrak a cap mathfrak c w xz z 2 neq mathfrak a mathfrak c In the first computation we see the general pattern for taking the sum of two finitely generated ideals it is the ideal generated by the union of their generators In the last three we observe that products and intersections agree whenever the two ideals intersect in the zero ideal These computations can be checked using Macaulay2 Radical of a ringIdeals appear naturally in the study of modules especially in the form of a radical For simplicity we work with commutative rings but with some changes the results are also true for non commutative rings Let R be a commutative ring By definition a primitive ideal of R is the annihilator of a nonzero simple R module The Jacobson radical J Jac R displaystyle J operatorname Jac R of R is the intersection of all primitive ideals Equivalently J m maximal idealsm displaystyle J bigcap mathfrak m text maximal ideals mathfrak m Indeed if M displaystyle M is a simple module and x is a nonzero element in M then Rx M displaystyle Rx M and R Ann M R Ann x M displaystyle R operatorname Ann M R operatorname Ann x simeq M meaning Ann M displaystyle operatorname Ann M is a maximal ideal Conversely if m displaystyle mathfrak m is a maximal ideal then m displaystyle mathfrak m is the annihilator of the simple R module R m displaystyle R mathfrak m There is also another characterization the proof is not hard J x R 1 yx is a unit element for every y R displaystyle J x in R mid 1 yx text is a unit element for every y in R For a not necessarily commutative ring it is a general fact that 1 yx displaystyle 1 yx is a unit element if and only if 1 xy displaystyle 1 xy is see the link and so this last characterization shows that the radical can be defined both in terms of left and right primitive ideals The following simple but important fact Nakayama s lemma is built in to the definition of a Jacobson radical if M is a module such that JM M displaystyle JM M then M does not admit a maximal submodule since if there is a maximal submodule L M displaystyle L subsetneq M J M L 0 displaystyle J cdot M L 0 and so M JM L M displaystyle M JM subset L subsetneq M a contradiction Since a nonzero finitely generated module admits a maximal submodule in particular one has If JM M displaystyle JM M and M is finitely generated then M 0 displaystyle M 0 A maximal ideal is a prime ideal and so one has nil R p prime ideals p Jac R displaystyle operatorname nil R bigcap mathfrak p text prime ideals mathfrak p subset operatorname Jac R where the intersection on the left is called the nilradical of R As it turns out nil R displaystyle operatorname nil R is also the set of nilpotent elements of R If R is an Artinian ring then Jac R displaystyle operatorname Jac R is nilpotent and nil R Jac R displaystyle operatorname nil R operatorname Jac R Proof first note the DCC implies Jn Jn 1 displaystyle J n J n 1 for some n If DCC a Ann Jn displaystyle mathfrak a supsetneq operatorname Ann J n is an ideal properly minimal over the latter then J a Ann Jn 0 displaystyle J cdot mathfrak a operatorname Ann J n 0 That is Jna Jn 1a 0 displaystyle J n mathfrak a J n 1 mathfrak a 0 a contradiction Extension and contraction of an idealLet A and B be two commutative rings and let f A B be a ring homomorphism If a displaystyle mathfrak a is an ideal in A then f a displaystyle f mathfrak a need not be an ideal in B e g take f to be the inclusion of the ring of integers Z into the field of rationals Q The extension ae displaystyle mathfrak a e of a displaystyle mathfrak a in B is defined to be the ideal in B generated by f a displaystyle f mathfrak a Explicitly ae yif xi xi a yi B displaystyle mathfrak a e Big sum y i f x i x i in mathfrak a y i in B Big If b displaystyle mathfrak b is an ideal of B then f 1 b displaystyle f 1 mathfrak b is always an ideal of A called the contraction bc displaystyle mathfrak b c of b displaystyle mathfrak b to A Assuming f A B is a ring homomorphism a displaystyle mathfrak a is an ideal in A b displaystyle mathfrak b is an ideal in B then b displaystyle mathfrak b is prime in B displaystyle Rightarrow bc displaystyle mathfrak b c is prime in A aec a displaystyle mathfrak a ec supseteq mathfrak a bce b displaystyle mathfrak b ce subseteq mathfrak b It is false in general that a displaystyle mathfrak a being prime or maximal in A implies that ae displaystyle mathfrak a e is prime or maximal in B Many classic examples of this stem from algebraic number theory For example embedding Z Z i displaystyle mathbb Z to mathbb Z left lbrack i right rbrack In B Z i displaystyle B mathbb Z left lbrack i right rbrack the element 2 factors as 2 1 i 1 i displaystyle 2 1 i 1 i where one can show neither of 1 i 1 i displaystyle 1 i 1 i are units in B So 2 e displaystyle 2 e is not prime in B and therefore not maximal as well Indeed 1 i 2 2i displaystyle 1 pm i 2 pm 2i shows that 1 i 1 i 1 i 2 displaystyle 1 i 1 i 1 i 2 1 i 1 i 1 i 2 displaystyle 1 i 1 i 1 i 2 and therefore 2 e 1 i 2 displaystyle 2 e 1 i 2 On the other hand if f is surjective and a ker f displaystyle mathfrak a supseteq ker f then aec a displaystyle mathfrak a ec mathfrak a and bce b displaystyle mathfrak b ce mathfrak b a displaystyle mathfrak a is a prime ideal in A displaystyle Leftrightarrow ae displaystyle mathfrak a e is a prime ideal in B a displaystyle mathfrak a is a maximal ideal in A displaystyle Leftrightarrow ae displaystyle mathfrak a e is a maximal ideal in B Remark Let K be a field extension of L and let B and A be the rings of integers of K and L respectively Then B is an integral extension of A and we let f be the inclusion map from A to B The behaviour of a prime ideal a p displaystyle mathfrak a mathfrak p of A under extension is one of the central problems of algebraic number theory The following is sometimes useful a prime ideal p displaystyle mathfrak p is a contraction of a prime ideal if and only if p pec displaystyle mathfrak p mathfrak p ec Proof Assuming the latter note peBp Bp pe displaystyle mathfrak p e B mathfrak p B mathfrak p Rightarrow mathfrak p e intersects A p displaystyle A mathfrak p a contradiction Now the prime ideals of Bp displaystyle B mathfrak p correspond to those in B that are disjoint from A p displaystyle A mathfrak p Hence there is a prime ideal q displaystyle mathfrak q of B disjoint from A p displaystyle A mathfrak p such that qBp displaystyle mathfrak q B mathfrak p is a maximal ideal containing peBp displaystyle mathfrak p e B mathfrak p One then checks that q displaystyle mathfrak q lies over p displaystyle mathfrak p The converse is obvious GeneralizationsIdeals can be generalized to any monoid object R displaystyle R otimes where R displaystyle R is the object where the monoid structure has been forgotten A left ideal of R displaystyle R is a subobject I displaystyle I that absorbs multiplication from the left by elements of R displaystyle R that is I displaystyle I is a left ideal if it satisfies the following two conditions I displaystyle I is a subobject of R displaystyle R For every r R displaystyle r in R otimes and every x I displaystyle x in I otimes the product r x displaystyle r otimes x is in I displaystyle I otimes A right ideal is defined with the condition r x I displaystyle r otimes x in I otimes replaced by x r I displaystyle x otimes r in I otimes A two sided ideal is a left ideal that is also a right ideal and is sometimes simply called an ideal When R displaystyle R is a commutative monoid object respectively the definitions of left right and two sided ideal coincide and the term ideal is used alone An ideal can also be thought of as a specific type of R module If we consider R displaystyle R as a left R displaystyle R module by left multiplication then a left ideal I displaystyle I is really just a left sub module of R displaystyle R In other words I displaystyle I is a left right ideal of R displaystyle R if and only if it is a left right R displaystyle R module that is a subset of R displaystyle R I displaystyle I is a two sided ideal if it is a sub R displaystyle R bimodule of R displaystyle R Example If we let R Z displaystyle R mathbb Z an ideal of Z displaystyle mathbb Z is an abelian group that is a subset of Z displaystyle mathbb Z i e mZ displaystyle m mathbb Z for some m Z displaystyle m in mathbb Z So these give all the ideals of Z displaystyle mathbb Z See alsoModular arithmetic Noether isomorphism theorem Boolean prime ideal theorem Ideal theory Ideal order theory Ideal norm Splitting of prime ideals in Galois extensions Ideal sheafNotesSome authors call the zero and unit ideals of a ring R the trivial ideals of R If R does not have a unit then the internal descriptions above must be modified slightly In addition to the finite sums of products of things in X with things in R we must allow the addition of n fold sums of the form x x x and n fold sums of the form x x x for every x in X and every n in the natural numbers When R has a unit this extra requirement becomes superfluous ReferencesJohn Stillwell 2010 Mathematics and its history p 439 Harold M Edwards 1977 Fermat s last theorem A genetic introduction to algebraic number theory p 76 Everest G Ward T 2005 An introduction to number theory p 83 Dummit amp Foote 2004 p 242 Dummit amp Foote 2004 10 1 Examples 1 Dummit amp Foote 2004 10 1 Proposition 3 Dummit amp Foote 2004 Ch 7 Proposition 6 Dummit amp Foote 2004 Ch 7 Theorem 7 Dummit amp Foote 2004 p 243 Lang 2005 Section III 2 Dummit amp Foote 2004 p 244 Because simple commutative rings are fields See Lam 2001 A First Course in Noncommutative Rings p 39 Zero ideal Math World 22 Aug 2024 Dummit amp Foote 2004 p 255 Dummit amp Foote 2004 p 251 Matsumura Hideyuki 1987 Commutative Ring Theory Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 132 ISBN 9781139171762 Eisenbud 1995 Exercise A 3 17 Milnor 1971 p 9 ideals www math uiuc edu Archived from the original on 2017 01 16 Retrieved 2017 01 14 sums products and powers of ideals www math uiuc edu Archived from the original on 2017 01 16 Retrieved 2017 01 14 intersection of ideals www math uiuc edu Archived from the original on 2017 01 16 Retrieved 2017 01 14 Atiyah amp Macdonald 1969 Proposition 3 16 Atiyah Michael F Macdonald Ian G 1969 Introduction to Commutative Algebra Perseus Books ISBN 0 201 00361 9 Dummit David Steven Foote Richard Martin 2004 Abstract algebra Third ed Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 9780471433347 Eisenbud David 1995 Commutative Algebra with a View toward Algebraic Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 150 Berlin New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 5350 1 ISBN 978 0 387 94268 1 MR 1322960 Lang Serge 2005 Undergraduate Algebra Third ed Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 22025 3 Hazewinkel Michiel Gubareni Nadiya Gubareni Nadezhda Mikhaĭlovna Kirichenko Vladimir V 2004 Algebras rings and modules Vol 1 Springer ISBN 1 4020 2690 0 Milnor John Willard 1971 Introduction to algebraic K theory Annals of Mathematics Studies Vol 72 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691081014 MR 0349811 Zbl 0237 18005 External linksLevinson Jake July 14 2014 The Geometric Interpretation for Extension of Ideals Stack Exchange