symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
monoid theory in algebra:
A zero-divisor is something that, like zero itself, when multiplied by something possibly nonzero still produces zero as a product.
Let be a absorption monoid (such as a commutative ring or any ring).
An element of is a non-zero-divisor if, whenever or , then . An element is a zero-divisor if there exists such that or .
In constructive mathematics, we want to be a tight apartness relation on in the definition of zero-divisor. We also say that is a strong non-zero-divisor if, whenever , then and . (The notion of (weak) non-zero-divisor makes sense even without any apartness relation.)
If is (or may be) non-commutative, then we may distinguish left and right (non)-zero-divisors in the usual way.
By this definition, zero itself is a zero-divisor if and only if is non-trivial. (Some authorities will differ on this point, but if you think about it, this is clearly the correct definition, by the same principle that the trivial ring is not a field, is not a prime number, etc. See too simple to be simple.)
An integral domain is precisely a commutative ring (whose multiplicative monoid is an absorption monoid by definition) in which zero is the unique zero-divisor of the multiplicative monoid of the commutative ring (or constructively, in which the strong non-zero-divisors are precisely the strong non-zero elements in the multiplicative monoid, that is those elements such that ).
The non-zero-divisors of any absorption monoid form a monoid under multiplication, which may be denoted . Note that if happens to be a field, then this agrees with the usual notation for the group of invertible elements of the multiplicative monoid , but is not a group in general. (We may use or for the group of invertible elements.)
If is any ideal of , then we can generalise from a zero-divisor to an -divisor. In a way, this is nothing new; is an -divisor in if and only if is a zero-divisor in . Ultimately, this is related to the notion of divisor in algebraic geometry.
Last revised on December 8, 2022 at 03:41:16. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.