Isomorphism of Surjective Homomorphisms in Finite Rings

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the properties of surjective homomorphisms between finite rings, specifically focusing on the ring Zp[x] and its relationship with other rings through homomorphisms. The original poster seeks to understand the implications of such homomorphisms and their kernels on the structure of the resulting rings.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the implications of surjective homomorphisms and the nature of their kernels. Questions arise regarding the relationship between rings S and T when both are derived from a common ring R through different surjective homomorphisms. There is also discussion on the characteristics of ideals in R and their impact on the resulting quotient rings.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants providing insights into the nature of ideals and their relationships. Some guidance has been offered regarding the structure of quotient rings, but there is no explicit consensus on the relationships between the rings S and T derived from R.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the complexity of ideals within the ring R and the potential for multiple non-isomorphic ideals. The discussion also touches on the nature of commutativity in relation to the problem posed.

Icebreaker
"Let R be the ring Zp[x] of polynomials with coefficients in the finite field Zp, and let f:R->S be a surjective homomorphism from R to a ring S. Show that S is either isomorphic to R, or is a finite ring."

If S is isomorphic to R, then we're done. If S is not isomorphic to R, then by hypothesis, f is not injective. That is, ker(f) contains more than the zero element of R. ker(f) is an ideal of R, therefore there exists a surjective homomorphism p:R->R/ker(f), where p(x) = x + ker(f).

My question is, if R is homomorphic to S and R is homomorphic to T, what is the relation between S and T? Are they the same? Isomorphic? In the question, R and S are given. In my answer, S is constructed.
 
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Did you finishing solving the problem? If Ker(f) has a non-zero element, then it has some polynomial of degree k. You know then that elements of R/Ker(f) have degree no more than k, and since there are only a finite number of possible coefficients for a given term in a polynomial, you've shown that R/Ker(f) is finite, hence so is S.

Certainly, S and T need not be the same or isomorphic. For every polynomial p in R, there is the ideal generated by p, (p), and there is always a surjective homomorphism from R to R/(p). But it's not true that for any polynomials p, q, that R/(p) is isomorphic to R/(q).
 
I did finish solving the problem. I was just wondering whether the answer to my question was true. Thanks anyway.
 
Well the correct answer to any question is true ;). Is your question the following: If there exists a surjective homomorphism f : R -> S and a surjective homomorphism g : R -> T, what is the relation between S and T? Well we know S = R/Ker(f), and T = R/Ker(g). We know Ker(f) and Ker(g) are ideals. Moreover, we know that for any ideal J, there is a surjective homomorphism j : R -> R/J, which simply projects r in R to r + J (i.e. the coset of J containing r). Actually, I don't know all of this, this is what I would suspect is true from what I know of groups and what little I know of rings. Anyways, assuming the above is true, your question reduces to asking what the relationships are between two arbitary ideals of R. In general, R may have more than one ideal (in fact, it always has more than one ideal because it has R and {0}, but it may have more than one trivial ideal as well), and it may even have many non-trivial ideals which are not all isomorphic to one another. So if R is arbitrary, there is not much that can be said about the relationship between two ideals of R. Maybe in particular cases, R will only have non-trivial ideals that are isomorphic to one another. For an analogy, the group Z5 x Z5 has more than one non-trivial normal subgroup but any two non-trivial normal subgroups are isomorphic.
 
Exercise: Let R and S be commutative rings. Find a ring T and surjective homomorphisms T-->R and T-->S.

(commutativity isn't necessary)
 
T = R x S, with the homomorphisms given by (r,s) |-> r and (r,s) |-> s respectively.
 

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