§2T. Euclidean Domains, Principal Ideal Domains, and Unique Factorization Domains
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 08 March 2011
Euclidean domains, principal ideal domains, and unique factorization domains
is a Euclidean domain is a PID.
Definition.
- Let be the set of nonnegative integers. A Euclidean domain is an integral domain with a function
called a size function, such that if and , then there exist such that
where either or
.
- Let be a commutative ring. A principal ideal domain is an ideal generated by a single element.
- A principal ideal domain (or PID) is an integral domain for which every ideal is principal.
A Euclidean domain is a principal ideal domain.
is a PID is a UFD.
Definition. Let be an integral domain.
- A unit is an element such that there exists an element such that .
- Let . The element divides if for some .
- Let . The element is a proper divisor of if for some and neither nor is a unit.
- Let . The elements and are associates if for some unit .
- An element is irreducible if
- ,
- is not a unit,
- has no proper divisor.
The following proposition shows that every property of divisors can be written in terms of containments of ideals and vice versa.
Let and and denote the ideals generated by the elements and respectively. Then
- is a unit .
- divides
.
- is a proper divisor of
.
- is an associate of
.
- is irreducible
- ,
- ,
- If and
then either
or
.
Definition.
- A unique factorization domain (or UFD) is an integral domain such that
- If then
for some
which are all irreducible.
- If and
where is a unit and
are irreducible, then and there exists a permutation
such that for each ,
for some unit .
A principal ideal domain is a unique factorization domain.
The proof of Theorem 1.3 will require the following lemmas.
If is a principal ideal domain and is an irreducible element of then is a prime ideal.
Let be a principal ideal domain. There does not exist an infinite sequence of elements
such that
Greatest common divisors
Definition.
- Let be a unique factorization domain. Let
A greatest common divisor,
is an element such that
- divides for all
- If divides for all
, then
divides .
Let be a unique factorization domain and let
Then
-
exists.
-
is unique up to multiplication by a unit.
References
[CM]
H. S. M. Coxeter and W. O. J. Moser, Generators and relations for discrete groups,
Fourth edition. Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete [Results in Mathematics and Related Areas], 14. Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1980.
MR0562913 (81a:20001)
[GW1]
F. Goodman and H. Wenzl,
The Temperly-Lieb algebra at roots of unity, Pacific J. Math. 161 (1993), 307-334.
MR1242201 (95c:16020)
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