Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/ideals-ring-theory

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Radical of an ideal

Concept in algebra


Concept in algebra

In ring theory, a branch of mathematics, the radical of an ideal I of a commutative ring is another ideal defined by the property that an element x is in the radical if and only if some power of x is in I. Taking the radical of an ideal is called radicalization. A radical ideal (or semiprime ideal) is an ideal that is equal to its radical. The radical of a primary ideal is a prime ideal.

This concept is generalized to non-commutative rings in the semiprime ring article.

Definition

The radical of an ideal I in a commutative ring R, denoted by \operatorname{rad}(I) or \sqrt{I}, is defined as :\sqrt{I} = \left{r\in R \mid r^n\in I\ \hbox{for some}\ n \in \Z^{+}!\right},

(note that I \subseteq \sqrt{I}). Intuitively, \sqrt{I} is obtained by taking all roots of elements of I within the ring R. Equivalently, \sqrt{I} is the preimage of the ideal of nilpotent elements (the nilradical) of the quotient ring R/I (via the natural map \pi\colon R\to R/I). The latter proves that \sqrt{I} is an ideal.Here is a direct proof that \sqrt{I} is an ideal. Start with a,b\in\sqrt{I} with some powers a^n,b^m \in I. To show that a+b\in\sqrt{I}, we use the binomial theorem (which holds for any commutative ring):

:\textstyle (a+b)^{n+m-1}=\sum_{i=0}^{n+m-1}\binom{n+m-1}{i}a^ib^{n+m-1-i}.

For each i, we have either i\geq n or n+m-1-i\geq m. Thus, in each term a^i b^{n+m-1-i}, one of the exponents will be large enough to make that factor lie in I. Since any element of I times an element of R lies in I (as I is an ideal), this term lies in I. Hence (a+b)^{n+m-1} \in I, and so a+b\in\sqrt{I}.

To finish checking that the radical is an ideal, take a\in\sqrt{I} with a^n\in I, and any r \in R. Then (ra)^n=r^na^n\in I, so ra\in\sqrt{I}. Thus the radical is an ideal.

If the radical of I is finitely generated, then some power of \sqrt{I} is contained in I. In particular, if I and J are ideals of a Noetherian ring, then I and J have the same radical if and only if I contains some power of J and J contains some power of I.

If an ideal I coincides with its own radical, then I is called a radical ideal or semiprime ideal.

Examples

  • Consider the ring \Z of integers.
    1. The radical of the ideal 4\Z of integer multiples of 4 is 2\Z (the evens).
    2. The radical of 5\Z is 5\Z.
    3. The radical of 12\Z is 6\Z.
    4. In general, the radical of m\Z is r\Z, where r is the product of all distinct prime factors of m, the largest square-free factor of m (see Radical of an integer). In fact, this generalizes to an arbitrary ideal (see the Properties section).
  • Consider the ideal I = \left(y^4\right) \subseteq \Complex[x,y]. It is trivial to show \sqrt{I}=(y) (using the basic property but we give some alternative methods: The radical \sqrt{I} corresponds to the nilradical \sqrt{0} of the quotient ring R = \Complex[x,y]/!\left(y^4\right), which is the intersection of all prime ideals of the quotient ring. This is contained in the Jacobson radical, which is the intersection of all maximal ideals, which are the kernels of homomorphisms to fields. Any ring homomorphism R \to \Complex must have y in the kernel in order to have a well-defined homomorphism (if we said, for example, that the kernel should be (x,y-1) the composition of \Complex[x,y] \to R \to \Complex would be \left(x, y^4, y-1\right), which is the same as trying to force 1=0). Since \Complex is algebraically closed, every homomorphism R \to \mathbb{F} must factor through \Complex, so we only have to compute the intersection of {\ker(\Phi) : \Phi \in \operatorname{Hom}(R,\Complex) } to compute the radical of (0). We then find that \sqrt{0} = (y) \subseteq R.

Properties

This section will continue the convention that I is an ideal of a commutative ring R:

  • It is always true that \sqrt{\sqrt{I}} = \sqrt{I}, i.e. radicalization is an idempotent operation. Moreover, \sqrt{I} is the smallest radical ideal containing I.
  • \sqrt{I} is the intersection of all the prime ideals of R that contain I\sqrt{I}=\bigcap_{\stackrel{\mathfrak{p}\text{ prime}}{R\supsetneq\mathfrak{p}\supseteq I}}\mathfrak{p},and thus the radical of a prime ideal is equal to itself.Proof: On one hand, every prime ideal is radical, and so this intersection contains \sqrt{I}. On the other hand, suppose r is an element of R that is not in \sqrt{I}, and let S be the set \left{r^n \mid n = 0, 1, 2, \ldots \right}. By the definition of \sqrt{I}, S must be disjoint from I. S is also multiplicatively closed. Thus, by a variant of Krull's theorem, there exists a prime ideal \mathfrak{p} that contains I and is still disjoint from S (see Prime ideal and Zorn's lemma). Since \mathfrak{p} contains I, but not r, this shows that r is not in the intersection of prime ideals containing I.

The statement may be strengthened a bit: the radical of I is the intersection of all prime ideals of R that are minimal among those containing I.

  • Specializing the last point, the nilradical (the set of all nilpotent elements) is equal to the intersection of all prime ideals of RFor a direct proof, see also the characterisation of the nilradical of a ring. \sqrt{0} = \mathfrak{N}R = \bigcap{\mathfrak{p}\subsetneq R\text{ prime}}\mathfrak{p}.This property is seen to be equivalent to the former via the natural map \pi\colon R\to R/I, which yields a bijection u: \left\lbrace\text{ideals }J\mid R\supseteq J\supseteq I\right\rbrace \quad {\overset{u}{\rightleftarrows}} \quad \left\lbrace\text{ideals }J\mid J\subseteq R/I\right\rbrace, defined by u \colon J\mapsto J/I=\lbrace r+I\mid r\in J\rbrace.This fact is also known as fourth isomorphism theorem (or correspondence theorem, or lattice theorem).
  • An ideal I in a ring R is radical if and only if the quotient ring R/I is reduced.
  • The radical of a homogeneous ideal is homogeneous.
  • The radical of an intersection of ideals is equal to the intersection of their radicals: \sqrt{I \cap J} = \sqrt{I} \cap \sqrt{J}.
  • The radical of a primary ideal is prime. If the radical of an ideal I is maximal, then I is primary.
  • If I is an ideal, \sqrt{I^n} = \sqrt{I}. Since prime ideals are radical ideals, \sqrt{\mathfrak{p}} = \mathfrak{p} for any prime ideal \mathfrak{p}.
  • Let I,J be ideals of a ring R. If \sqrt{I}, \sqrt{J} are comaximal, then I, J are comaximal.Proof: R = \sqrt{\sqrt{I} + \sqrt{J} } = \sqrt{I + J} implies I + J = R.
  • Let M be a finitely generated module over a Noetherian ring R. Then\sqrt{\operatorname{ann}R(M)} = \bigcap{\mathfrak{p} ,\in, \operatorname{supp}M} \mathfrak{p} = \bigcap_{\mathfrak{p} ,\in, \operatorname{ass}M} \mathfrak{p} where \operatorname{supp}M is the support of M and \operatorname{ass}M is the set of associated primes of M.

Applications

One of the primary motivations for studying radicals of ideals is to understand algebraic sets and varieties in algebraic geometry.

For a subset of polynomials S\subset \mathbb{k}[x_1,\dots,x_n] and subset of points X\subset \mathbb{k}^n, where \mathbb{k} is an algebraically closed field, let :\operatorname{V}(S) = \left{x \in \mathbb{k}^n \mid f(x)=0 \mbox{ for all } f \in S\right} and :\operatorname{I}(X) = {f \in \mathbb{k}[x_1, \dots, x_n] \mid f(x)=0 \mbox{ for all } x \in X } be the zero locus of S and vanishing ideal of X, respectively.

If (S) is the ideal in \mathbb{k}[x_1,\dots,x_n] generated by the elements of S, then \mathrm{V}(S)=\mathrm{V}((S))=\mathrm{V}(\sqrt{(S)}). Moreover, the vanishing ideal is always a radical ideal: \mathrm{I}(X)=\sqrt{\mathrm{I}(X)}.

The operations V and I are, in a sense, inverses of each other:

For any subset of points X, \mathrm{V}(\mathrm{I}(X))=\overline{X}, where \overline{X} is the closure of X in the Zariski topology. In particular, \mathrm{V}(\mathrm{I}(X))=X if X is an algebraic set, since algebraic sets are closed in the Zariski topology.

Hilbert's Nullstellensatz is a fundamental result in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry that addresses the composition of V and I in the opposite order. One version of this celebrated theorem states that for any ideal of polynomials J, we have :\operatorname{I}(\operatorname{V}(J)) = \sqrt{J}. (Geometrically, this says that if an affine algebraic set V is cut out by the polynomial equations f_1(x_1,\dots,x_n)=0,\dots,f_m(x_1,\dots,x_n)=0, then the only other polynomials that vanish on V are those in the radical of the ideal (f_1,\ldots,f_m).)

As a corollary, \operatorname{I}(\operatorname{V}(J)) = J if J is a radical ideal. Thus, we can state more precisely that the V and I operations give a bijective correspondence between radical ideals and algebraic sets: :{\mathrm{radical\ ideals}\subset \mathbb{k}[x_1,\dots,x_n]}\ \underset{\mathrm{I}}{\stackrel{\mathrm{V}}{\rightleftarrows}}\ {\mathrm{algebraic\ sets}\subset \mathbb{k}^n}.

Notes

Citations

References

References

  1. {{harvnb. Atiyah. Macdonald. 1994
  2. Aluffi, Paolo. (2009). "Algebra: Chapter 0". AMS.
  3. {{harvnb. Atiyah. Macdonald. 1994
  4. {{harvnb. Lang. 2002
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Radical of an ideal — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report