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  2. Radical of a ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_of_a_ring

    The Artinian radical is usually defined for two-sided Noetherian rings as the sum of all right ideals that are Artinian modules. The definition is left-right symmetric, and indeed produces a two-sided ideal of the ring. This radical is important in the study of Noetherian rings, as outlined by Chatters & Hajarnavis (1980).

  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. 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).

  5. Maximal ideal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximal_ideal

    If R has a unique maximal right ideal, then R is known as a local ring, and the maximal right ideal is also the unique maximal left and unique maximal two-sided ideal of the ring, and is in fact the Jacobson radical J(R). It is possible for a ring to have a unique maximal two-sided ideal and yet lack unique maximal one-sided ideals: for example ...

  6. Ideal (ring theory) - Wikipedia

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

    The factor ring of a prime ideal is a prime ring in general and is an integral domain for commutative rings. [14] Radical ... See also equidimensional ring. Two other ...

  7. Radical of a module - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_of_a_module

    In fact, if M is finitely generated over a ring, then rad(M) itself is a superfluous submodule. This is because any proper submodule of M is contained in a maximal submodule of M when M is finitely generated. A ring for which rad(M) = {0} for every right R-module M is called a right V-ring. For any module M, rad(M/rad(M)) is zero.

  8. Associative algebra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Associative_algebra

    The fact that A is Artinian simplifies the notion of a Jacobson radical; for an Artinian ring, the Jacobson radical of A is the intersection of all (two-sided) maximal ideals (in contrast, in general, a Jacobson radical is the intersection of all left maximal ideals or the intersection of all right maximal ideals.)

  9. Jacobson's conjecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacobson's_conjecture

    For a ring R with Jacobson radical J, the nonnegative powers are defined by using the product of ideals.. Jacobson's conjecture: In a right-and-left Noetherian ring, = {}. In other words: "The only element of a Noetherian ring in all powers of J is 0."