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CHAPTER V - Prime Ideals in Commutative Rings

Neal H. McCoy
Affiliation:
Smith College
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Summary

Prime ideals. One of the most important properties of a prime integer p is that a product of two integers is divisible by p only if at least one of the integers is divisible by p. In the notation of principal ideals, this can be restated as follows. If p is a prime, then n1n2 ≡ 0(p) implies that n1 ≡ 0(p) or n2 ≡ 0(p), or both. Now if R is an arbitrary commutative ring, an ideal p in R is said to be a prime ideal if and only if ab ≡ 0(p) implies that a ≡ 0(p) or b ≡ 0(p), or both. Thus the prime ideals in I are precisely the ideals (p), where p is a prime, together with the ideal (0) and the ideal I. In any commutative ring R, it is obvious that the ideal R is always prime; and the ideal (0) is a prime ideal if and only if R has no proper divisors of zero.

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Rings and Ideals , pp. 96 - 113
Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 1948

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