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maximal ideal is prime
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(Theorem)
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Theorem. In a commutative ring with non-zero unity, any maximal ideal is a prime ideal.
Proof. Let $\mathfrak{m}$ be a maximal ideal of such a ring $R$ and let the ring product $rs$ belong to $\mathfrak{m}$ but e.g. $r \notin \mathfrak{m}$ . The maximality of $\mathfrak{m}$ implies that $\mathfrak{m}\!+\!(r) = R = (1)$ . Thus there exists an element $m \in \mathfrak{m}$ and an element $x \in R$ such that $m\!+\!xr = 1$ . Now
$m$ and $rs$ belong to $\mathfrak{m}$ , whence $$s = 1s = (m\!+\!xr)s = sm\!+\!x(rs) \in \mathfrak{m}.$$ So we can say that along with $rs$ , at least one of its factors belongs to $\mathfrak{m}$ , and therefore $\mathfrak{m}$ is a prime ideal of $R$ .
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"maximal ideal is prime" is owned by pahio.
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Cross-references: implies, ring product, ring, proof, prime ideal, maximal ideal, non-zero unity, commutative ring, theorem
There are 3 references to this entry.
This is version 5 of maximal ideal is prime, born on 2007-11-23, modified 2007-11-24.
Object id is 10054, canonical name is MaximalIdealIsPrime.
Accessed 1998 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 13A15 (Commutative rings and algebras :: General commutative ring theory :: Ideals; multiplicative ideal theory) | | | 16D25 (Associative rings and algebras :: Modules, bimodules and ideals :: Ideals) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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