Imbedding of rings
A monomorphism of a ring into another ring; a ring is imbeddable in a ring
if
is isomorphic to a subring of
. The conditions for imbedding of an associative ring in an (associative) skew-field and of an arbitrary ring into a division ring have been studied in great detail. These studies were initiated by A.I. Mal'tsev [1], who constructed an example of an associative ring without zero divisors and not imbeddable in a skew-field. The following Mal'tsev problem remained an open question for a long time: Is any associative ring without zero divisors and for which the semi-group of non-zero elements is imbeddable in a group, imbeddable in a skew-field? This problem was negatively answered in 1966 (cf. [2]). A square matrix
of order
over an associative ring
is said to be non-full if it can be represented in the form
where
,
are matrices of orders
and
, respectively, and
. Let
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be square matrices of order over
in which all columns (except, possibly, the first column) are identical. Then the matrix
![]() |
is said to be the determinant sum of and
with respect to the first column. The determinant sum of square matrices of the same order with respect to an arbitrary column (row) is defined in a similar manner. An associative ring
with a unit element is imbeddable in a skew-field if and only if it has no zero divisors and if no scalar matrix
with a non-zero element
along the diagonal can be represented as the determinant sum of a finite number of non-full matrices [2]. The class of associative rings imbeddable in skew-fields is not finitely axiomatized (i.e. cannot be defined by a finite number of axioms) [3]. A number of sufficient conditions for imbedding of an associative ring in a skew-field are known; the following are the most important. Let
be an associative ring without zero divisors and for which the semi-group of non-zero elements satisfies Ore's condition (cf. Imbedding of semi-groups). Then
is imbeddable in a skew-field [4]. The group algebra of an ordered group is imbeddable in a skew-field (the Mal'tsev–Neumann theorem, cf. [4]). An arbitrary domain of free right (left) ideals (cf. Associative rings and algebras) is imbeddable in a skew-field [2].
A ring is imbeddable in a division ring if and only if it has no zero divisors. Let
,
be rings, let
be a symbol,
. A mapping
is said to be a
-homomorphism if: 1) the set
is a ring and the mapping
on this set is a ring homomorphism; 2) it follows from
,
that
; and 3) it follows from
,
that
. A
-homomorphism of a field is nothing but a specialization (of a point) of the field (cf. Specialization of a point). A division ring
is a free
-extension of a ring
if
includes
and is generated (as a division ring) by the ring
, while any
-homomorphism of the ring
into some division ring
may be extended to a
-homomorphism of
into
. Every ring without zero divisors has a free
-extension [4].
References
[1] | A.I. [A.I. Mal'tsev] Malcev, "On the immersion of an algebraic ring into a field" Math. Ann. , 113 (1937) pp. 686–691 |
[2] | P.M. Cohn, "Free rings and their relations" , Acad. Press (1971) |
[3] | P.M. Cohn, "The class of rings embeddable in skew fields" Bull. London Math. Soc. , 6 (1974) pp. 147–148 |
[4] | P.M. Cohn, "Universal algebra" , Reidel (1981) |
[5] | L.A. Bokut', "Embedding of rings" Russian Math. Surveys , 42 : 4 (1987) pp. 105–138 Uspekhi Mat. Nauk , 42 (1987) pp. 87–111 |
Comments
A -homomorphism is also called a localization (cf. also Localization in a commutative algebra).
Another classical problem is imbedding of a ring in a finite matrix ring over a commutative ring. A necessary condition is that it satisfies all universal polynomial identities
of the
matrix ring over the integers. The condition is sufficient if
is prime or semi-prime, but fails in other cases (cf. [a1]).
References
[a1] | L.H. Rowen, "Polynomial identities in ring theory" , Acad. Press (1980) pp. Chapt. 7 |
Imbedding of rings. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Imbedding_of_rings&oldid=19119