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Division rings

Abbreviation: DRng

Definition

A \emph{division ring} (also called \emph{skew field}) is a ring with identity R=R,+,,0,,1 such that

R is non-trivial: 01

every non-zero element has a multiplicative inverse: x0y(xy=1)

Remark: The inverse of x is unique, and is usually denoted by x1.

Morphisms

Let R and S be fields. A morphism from R to S is a function h:RS that is a homomorphism:

h(x+y)=h(x)+h(y), h(xy)=h(x)h(y), h(1)=1

Remark: It follows that h(0)=0 and h(x)=h(x).

Examples

Example 1: Q,+,,0,,1, the division ring of quaternions with addition, subtraction, zero, multiplication, and one.

Basic results

0 is a zero for : 0x=x and x0=0.

Properties

Finite members

Every finite division ring is a fields (i.e. is commutative). J. H. Maclagan-Wedderburn,\emph{A theorem on finite algebras}, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc., \textbf{6}1905,349–352MRreview

Subclasses

Superclasses

References


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