nocheesie said:
I'm having a very tough time understanding homomorphisms and ideals, probably because I'm very fuzzy with the concept of rings. I'm stuck on the following problem:
Find all the ideals in the following rings:
...
2. Z[7] (Z subscript 7, equivalence classes of 7 I'm guessing)
3. Z[6]
...
suggest you learn to write Z
7
to see how anybody at Physicsforums writes something, pretend you are going to quote them and respond------so click on "quote" underneath their post
you will see how they wrote something
then you can just click "back" on your browser and go away without responding if you please----you don't have to go thru with responding if you don't want
in the case of that, if you press "quote" on this post you will see
that Z
7 is written
Z[s u b]7[/s u b]
but removing the spaces in s u b
so that it reads sub
-----------------------------
yeah Z
7 means the integers modulo 7
which you can think of as equivalence classes
or you can think of them as the set {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
where after ever + and every x
(after every addition or multiplication)
you mod out any multiple of seven
I don't think Z
7 has any ideals excpt the zero ideal
and the whole Z
7
because just try
suppose you had an ideal with 2 in it, it has to be closed under addition
so 2+2 has to be in the ideal as well!
2, 2+2, 2+2+2, then the next is 2+2+2+2 = 1
but if 1 is in the ideal then everything is
because you can get anything by adding one to itself.
go ahead and try anything in Z
7
like 3
if 3 is in then 3+3+3 = 2
is in and if 2 is in then everything is
Several people here (eg Matt Grime for one) can tell you a theorem that covers all these cases, notice that
7 is a prime number
but sometimes understanding can come just by being patient enough to experiment
Z
6 might be different! because 6 is not a prime number
it might be interesting to find the ideals in the ring
Z
6
or Z
12
------------------
I want to see what comes of this
later we can look at Z
which I think is what happens when you throw in the imaginary number thesquareroot of -1
throw that in with the integers
Personally I don't think the rational numbers have any nontrivial ideals
they got nothing but the zero ideal {0} and the whole ring itself
they are a "field" meaning for one thing that multiplicative inverses are
included, so any ideal with nonzero q in it also has 1
because you can multiply q by 1/q and it should not evict you from the ideal so that means 1 is in the ideal, and then it is all over because an ideal
with 1 in it is the whole ring!
but Z might be good to look at because it does not have inverses
----------------
however first things first
lets get all the ideal of Z6