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  2. Radical of a ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_of_a_ring

    In ring theory, a branch of mathematics, a radical of a ring is an ideal of "not-good" elements of the ring. The first example of a radical was the nilradical introduced by Köthe (1930), based on a suggestion of Wedderburn (1908). In the next few years several other radicals were discovered, of which the most important example is the Jacobson ...

  3. Jacobson radical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobson_radical

    For a general ring with unity R, the Jacobson radical J(R) is defined as the ideal of all elements r ∈ R such that rM = 0 whenever M is a simple R-module.That is, = {=}. This is equivalent to the definition in the commutative case for a commutative ring R because the simple modules over a commutative ring are of the form R / for some maximal ideal of R, and the annihilators of R / in R are ...

  4. Jacobson's conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobson's_conjecture

    In other words: "The only element of a Noetherian ring in all powers of J is 0." The original conjecture posed by Jacobson in 1956 [ 1 ] asked about noncommutative one-sided Noetherian rings, however Israel Nathan Herstein produced a counterexample in 1965, [ 2 ] and soon afterwards, Arun Vinayak Jategaonkar produced a different example which ...

  5. Quasiregular element - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasiregular_element

    Let R be a ring (with unity) and let r be an element of R.Then r is said to be quasiregular, if 1 − r is a unit in R; that is, invertible under multiplication. [1] The notions of right or left quasiregularity correspond to the situations where 1 − r has a right or left inverse, respectively.

  6. Radical of an ideal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_of_an_ideal

    Consider the ring of integers.. The radical of the ideal of integer multiples of is (the evens).; The radical of is .; The radical of is .; In general, the radical of is , where is the product of all distinct prime factors of , the largest square-free factor of (see Radical of an integer).

  7. Semisimple algebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semisimple_algebra

    The radical contains all nilpotent ideals, and if the algebra is finite-dimensional, the radical itself is a nilpotent ideal. A finite-dimensional algebra is then said to be semisimple if its radical contains only the zero element. An algebra A is called simple if it has no proper ideals and A 2 = {ab | a, b ∈ A} ≠ {0}. As the terminology ...

  8. Semi-local ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-local_ring

    The classical ring of quotients for any commutative Noetherian ring is a semilocal ring. The endomorphism ring of an Artinian module is a semilocal ring. Semi-local rings occur for example in algebraic geometry when a (commutative) ring R is localized with respect to the multiplicatively closed subset S = ∩ (R \ p i ) , where the p i are ...

  9. Ideal (ring theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_(ring_theory)

    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 b n is in I for some natural number n .