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Hw-Solns Ring Theory

The document contains information about ring theory and polynomial rings. It discusses several concepts: - Whether the rings 2Z and 3Z are isomorphic (they are not) - The possible homomorphisms from Z×Z to itself - If the characteristic of a ring divides the characteristic of its homomorphic image - Whether the preimage of an ideal under a ring homomorphism is an ideal - Conditions under which the preimage of a prime/maximal ideal is prime/maximal - That the homomorphic image of a principal ideal ring is a principal ideal ring - That the field of quotients of Z[i] is isomorphic to Q[i] - Examples of ideals in polynomial

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
222 views4 pages

Hw-Solns Ring Theory

The document contains information about ring theory and polynomial rings. It discusses several concepts: - Whether the rings 2Z and 3Z are isomorphic (they are not) - The possible homomorphisms from Z×Z to itself - If the characteristic of a ring divides the characteristic of its homomorphic image - Whether the preimage of an ideal under a ring homomorphism is an ideal - Conditions under which the preimage of a prime/maximal ideal is prime/maximal - That the homomorphic image of a principal ideal ring is a principal ideal ring - That the field of quotients of Z[i] is isomorphic to Q[i] - Examples of ideals in polynomial

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Ch 15: 10, 24

Ch 15: 43, 47, 48, 57


Ch 16: 4, 9, 17, 18
Ch 16: 12, 19, 24, 39, 40, 41

Chapter 15
10) a) Is 2Z isomorphic to 3Z?
Suppose such an isomorphism : 2Z 3Z exists. Then (2) = 3n for some n Z.
(2)(2) = (2*2) = (4) = (2+2) = (2) + (2). So we must have
(2)(2) = (2) + (2) (3n)(3n) = 3n + 3n 9n2 = 6n
n = 0 or n = 2/3. But both are impossible.
cannot exist.
b) Is 2Z isomorphic to 3Z?
Similarly, (2) = 4n for some integer n.
(2)(2) = (2) + (2) (4n)(4n) = 4n + 4n 16n2 = 8n
n = 0 or n = 1/2. But both are impossible.
f cannot exist.
24) Consider homomorphism : Z Z Z Z. What are the possibilities for ((1, 0)) ?
Claim: carries idempotents to idempotents.
Proof: Let x be an idempotent. Then ((x))2 = (x)(x) = (x2) = (x).
We can find 9 such homomorphisms:
((a, b)) = (a, b) ; ((a, b)) = (b, a) ; ((a, b)) = (a, a)
((a, b)) = (a, 0) ; ((a, b)) = (0, a) ; ((a, b)) = (b, b)
((a, b)) = (0, b) ; ((a, b)) = (b, 0) ; ((a, b)) = (0, 0)
We see that there are 4 possibilities for ((1, 0)); they are (1, 0), (0, 1), (1, 1), (0, 0).
43) Let R and S be commutative rings with unity. If is a homomorphism from R onto S and the
characteristic of R is nonzero, prove that char(S) divides char(R)
By Theorem 13.3, char(R) is the order of 1R under addition.
char(S) is the order of 1S under addition.
is onto. Since S is nontrivial, (1R) = 1S by Theorem 15.1, part 6.
by Theorem 10.1 (Properties of Group Homomorphisms),
the order of (1R) = 1S under addition must divide that of 1R .
so char(S) divides char(R) .

47) Suppose that R and S are commutative rings with unities. let be a ring homomorphism from
R onto S and let A be an ideal of S.
a) If A is prime in S, show that -1(A) = *x R | (x) A+ is prime in R.
Theorem 15.1, part 4 states that -1(A) is an ideal of R.
let ab -1(A) . Then (ab) = (a)(b) A
Since A is prime, (a)(b) A implies that (a) A or (b) A,
hence a -1(A) or b -1(A).
b) If A is maximal in S, show that -1(A) is maximal in R.
Solution 1 (the direct method):
Suppose that there is some ideal I in R that properly contains -1(A).
-1(A) I , so (-1(A)) (I). A well-known result from set/function theory states that if
is surjective, then (-1(A)) = A. So A (I).
-1(A) is properly contained in I, so there exists an element b such that b I and b -1(A).
Then by definition (b) (I) and (b) A.
Hence A (I) is nonempty and A is properly contained in (I).
But A is maximal, meaning that (I) = S.
Clearly I R. Now suppose r R. Then (r) S = (I)
For some r I, (r) = (r). Then 0 = (r) (r) = (r r)
(r r) Ker = -1({0}) -1(A) I r + (r r) = r I I = R.
So -1(A) must be maximal.
Solution 2 (book method)
Consider the natural ring homomorphism :S S/A defined by (s) = s + A.
By theorem 15.4, A is the kernel of this homomorphism.
Then the homomorphism ( ): R S/A defined by ( )(r) = (r) + A has -1(A) as
its kernel.
The mapping given by (r + -1(A)) = (r) + A is an isomorphism from
R/-1(A) to ( )(R) , by Theorem 15.3.
Now consider ( )(R). is surjective, and clearly is also surjective (for each (s + A) S/A,
we can easily see that -1({s + A}) has at least one element). So the mapping is surjective
and ( )(R) = S/A. Hence R/-1(A) S/A .
A is maximal in S, so by Theorem 14.4, S/A is a field. But this means that R/-1(A) is also a
field by isomorphism (this is easily checked). Again by Theorem 14.4, -1(A) is maximal.

48) A principal ideal ring is a ring with the property that every ideal has the form a.
Show that the homomorphic image of a principal ideal ring is a principal ideal ring.
Consider a principal ideal ring R and the ring homomorphism : R S. From Theorem 15.1 part
2, (R) is a subring of S.
Now consider an ideal I in (R). By From Theorem 15.1 part 4, then -1(I) is an ideal of R.
Because R is a principal ideal ring, there exists some a R such that -1(I) = a.
Note that (a) = I because I is contained in the image.
Suppose s (a). Then s = s(a) for some s (R). But a a = -1(I), so (a) I. By
the definition of an ideal, s(a) I for ALL s (R). So s I and hence (a) I.
Suppose s I (R). Then s = (r) for some r a . Then r = ra for some r R (definition of
a). Thus s = (r) = (ra) = (r)(a). Hence s (a) and I (a).
Thus I = (a), and (R) must be a principal ideal ring.
57) Let Z,i- = *a + bi | a, b Z+. Show that the field of quotients of Z,i- is ring-isomorphic to Q[i]
= *r + si | r, s Q+.
Direct verification

Chapter 16
4) Direct verification
9) Direct verification
17) Direct verification This is directly dependent on the fact that there are no zero-divisors in an
integral domain.
18) Prove that the ideal x in Q,x- is maximal.
Suppose J is an ideal in Q[x] that properly contains the ideal x. But the only kind of element that
can belong in J and not x is a polynomial that contains a nonzero rational constant. Since J is
closed under addition, we can simply subtract the non-constant parts (which belong in x) from
this polynomial, leaving only the rational constant which is a unit in J. An ideal that contains a unit
must be the entire ring, so J = Q[x]. Hence x is maximal in Q[x].
Or, we can consider an arbitrary element of the factor ring Q[x]/x, namely p(x) + x. If p(x) has
no nonzero constants, then p(x) + x = x, which is the additive identity in Q[x]/x. However, if
p(x) has a nonzero constant p0, then p(x) + x can be rewritten as p0 + x, which has a
multiplicative inverse (1/p0) + x. So Q[x]/x is a field, hence x is maximal.

12) Simple computation: in Z7[x], 5x4 + 3x3 + 1 = (3x2 + 2x + 1)(4x2 + 3x + 6) + (6x + 2)


19) Direct verification (given in back of book)
24) Prove that Z[x] is not a principal ideal domain. (Compare this with Theorem 16.3.)
A counterexample is sufficient. There are many ideals in Z[x] that cannot be generated by a single
polynomial. One is given in the answer to #39.
39) Give an example of a commutative ring R with unity and a maximal ideal I of R such that I[x] is
not a maximal ideal of R[x].
Let R = Z and I = 2. Then the ideal of Z[x] consisting of polynomials with the terms of highest
and/or lowest power having even coefficients is one that properly contains 2[x], since the
coefficients of the middle terms need not be even.
40) Let R be a commutative ring with unity. If I is a prime ideal of R, prove that I[x] is a prime ideal
of R[x].
Direct verification (or consult http://math.arizona.edu/~lebovitz/415/415feb10.pdf )
41) Let f(x) and g(x) belong to F[x], where F is a field. If f(x) and g(x) are relatively prime, prove
that there exist polynomials h(x) and k(x) in F[x] such that f(x)h(x) and g(x)k(x) = 1.
F[x] is a PID, so f(x), g(x) = a(x) for some a(x) in F[x]. The fact that a(x) divides both f(x) and
g(x) implies that a(x) is a constant, hence a unit. So 1 1 = F[x] = f(x), g(x).

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