Radical of an ideal


In commutative ring theory, a branch of mathematics, the radical of an ideal is an ideal such that an element is in the radical if and only if some power of is in . A radical ideal is an ideal that is equal to its own radical. The radical of a primary ideal is a prime ideal.
This concept is generalized to non-commutative rings in the Semiprime ring article.

Definition

The radical of an ideal in a commutative ring, denoted by or, is defined as
.
Intuitively, is obtained by taking all roots of elements of within the ring. Equivalently, is the pre-image of the ideal of nilpotent elements in the quotient ring . The latter shows is itself an ideal.
If the radical of is finitely generated, then some power of is contained in. In particular, if and are ideals of a noetherian ring, then and have the same radical if and only if contains some power of and contains some power of.
If an ideal coincides with its own radical, then is called a radical ideal or semiprime ideal.

Examples

  1. The radical of the ideal of integer multiples of is .
  2. The radical of is.
  3. The radical of is.
  4. In general, the radical of ' is ', where is the product of all distinct prime factors of, the largest square-free factor of . In fact, this generalizes to an arbitrary ideal.
This section will continue the convention that I is an ideal of a commutative ring :
where is the support of and is the set of associated primes of.

Applications

The primary motivation in studying radicals is Hilbert's Nullstellensatz in commutative algebra. One version of this celebrated theorem states that for any ideal in the polynomial ring over an algebraically closed field, one has
where
and
Geometrically, this says that if a variety is cut out by the polynomial equations, then the only other polynomials which vanish on are those in the radical of the ideal.
Another way of putting it: the composition is a closure operator on the set of ideals of a ring.

Citations