Is 11 a Prime in the Non-UFD Ring Z[sqrt{-5}]?

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I am trying to prove that 11 is a prime in \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}].

I noticed that \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}] is not a UFD so I cannot show that it is irreducible then conclude it is prime.

I know that that an ideal is prime if and only if the quotient ring is a domain.
I was wondering if it is correct for me to show that
\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}]/(11)\cong\mathbb{Z}_{11}[x]/(x^2+1)
If this is true then I can conclude that \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}] is a domain because
\mathbb{Z}_{11}[x]/(x^2+1) is a finite field.
Thank you

EDIT: OMG, Made a huge typo originally. The ring is \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{-5}] not \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}]
 
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bessletama said:
I am trying to prove that 11 is a prime in \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}].

I noticed that \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}] is not a UFD so I cannot show that it is irreducible then conclude it is prime.

I know that that an ideal is prime if and only if the quotient ring is a domain.
I was wondering if it is correct for me to show that
\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}]/(11)\cong\mathbb{Z}_{11}[x]/(x^2+1)
If this is true then I can conclude that \mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}] is a domain because
\mathbb{Z}_{11}[x]/(x^2+1) is a finite field.
Thank you


You could conclude that if you can show the isomorphism \,\mathbb{Z}[\sqrt{5}]/(11)\cong\mathbb{Z}_{11}[x]/(x^2+1)\, .

In fact, you'd conclude something stronger: the ideal \,(11)\subset \Bbb Z[\sqrt 5]\, is then maximal and thus prime.

DonAntonio
 
i guess the first step for me would be to try to find a square root of -5 in the ring Z11.
 
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