Integral domain


In mathematics, an integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring in which [zero-product property|the product ring|product of any two Zero ring|nonzero elements is nonzero]. In an integral domain, every nonzero element a has the cancellation property, that is, if, implies. Integral domains are generalizations of the ring of integers and provide a setting that is useful for studying divisibility.
"Integral domain" is defined almost universally as above, but there is some variation. This article follows the convention that rings have a multiplicative identity, generally denoted 1, but some authors do not follow this, by not requiring integral domains to have a multiplicative identity. Noncommutative integral domains are sometimes admitted. This article, however, follows the much more usual convention of reserving the term "integral domain" for the commutative case and using "domain" for the general case including noncommutative rings.
Some sources, notably Lang, use the term entire ring for integral domain.
Some specific kinds of integral domains are given with the following chain of class inclusions:

Definition

An integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring in which the product of any two nonzero elements is nonzero. Equivalently:
  • An integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring with no nonzero zero divisors.
  • An integral domain is a commutative ring in which the zero ideal is a prime ideal.
  • An integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring for which every nonzero element is cancellable under multiplication.
  • An integral domain is a ring for which the set of nonzero elements is a commutative monoid under multiplication.
  • An integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring in which for every nonzero element r, the function that maps each element x of the ring to the product xr is injective. Elements r with this property are called regular, so it is equivalent to require that every nonzero element of the ring be regular.
  • An integral domain is a ring that is isomorphic to a subring of a field.

Examples

Non-examples

The following rings are not integral domains.

Divisibility, prime elements, and irreducible elements

In this section, R is an integral domain.
Given elements a and b of R, one says that a ''divides b'', or that a is a divisor of b, or that b is a multiple of a, if there exists an element x in R such that.
The units of R are the elements that divide 1; these are precisely the invertible elements in R. Units divide all other elements.
If a divides b and b divides a, then a and b are associated elements or associates. Equivalently, a and b are associates if for some unit u.
An irreducible element is a nonzero non-unit that cannot be written as a product of two non-units.
A nonzero non-unit p is a prime element if, whenever p divides a product ab, then p divides a or p divides b. Equivalently, an element p is prime if and only if the principal ideal is a nonzero prime ideal.
Both notions of irreducible elements and prime elements generalize the ordinary definition of prime numbers in the ring if one considers as prime the negative primes.
Every prime element is irreducible. The converse is not true in general: for example, in the quadratic integer ring the element 3 is irreducible, but not prime. In a unique factorization domain, an irreducible element is a prime element.
While unique factorization does not hold in, there is unique factorization of ideals. See Lasker–Noether theorem.

Properties

Field of fractions

The field of fractions K of an integral domain R is the set of fractions a/''b with a'' and b in R and modulo an appropriate equivalence relation, equipped with the usual addition and multiplication operations. It is "the smallest field containing R" in the sense that there is an injective ring homomorphism such that any injective ring homomorphism from R to a field factors through K. The field of fractions of the ring of integers is the field of rational numbers The field of fractions of a field is isomorphic to the field itself.

Algebraic geometry

Integral domains are characterized by the condition that they are reduced and irreducible. The former condition ensures that the nilradical of the ring is zero, so that the intersection of all the ring's minimal primes is zero. The latter condition is that the ring have only one minimal prime. It follows that the unique minimal prime ideal of a reduced and irreducible ring is the zero ideal, so such rings are integral domains. The converse is clear: an integral domain has no nonzero nilpotent elements, and the zero ideal is the unique minimal prime ideal.
This translates, in algebraic geometry, into the fact that the coordinate ring of an affine algebraic set is an integral domain if and only if the algebraic set is an algebraic variety.
More generally, a commutative ring is an integral domain if and only if its spectrum is an integral affine scheme.

Characteristic and homomorphisms

The characteristic of an integral domain is either 0 or a prime number.
If R is an integral domain of prime characteristic p, then the Frobenius endomorphism is injective.