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Krull's theorem

In mathematics, and more specifically in ring theory, Krull's theorem, named after Wolfgang Krull, asserts that a nonzero ring[1] has at least one maximal ideal. The theorem was proved in 1929 by Krull, who used transfinite induction. The theorem admits a simple proof using Zorn's lemma, and in fact is equivalent to Zorn's lemma,[2] which in turn is equivalent to the axiom of choice.

Variants

Let R be a ring, and let I be a proper ideal of R. Then there is a maximal ideal of R containing I.
The statement of the original theorem can be obtained by taking I to be the zero ideal (0). Conversely, applying the original theorem to R/I leads to this result.
To prove the "stronger" result directly, consider the set S of all proper ideals of R containing I. The set S is nonempty since IS. Furthermore, for any chain T of S, the union of the ideals in T is an ideal J, and a union of ideals not containing 1 does not contain 1, so JS. By Zorn's lemma, S has a maximal element M. This M is a maximal ideal containing I.

Notes

  1. ^ In this article, rings have a 1.
  2. ^ Hodges, W. (1979). "Krull implies Zorn". Journal of the London Mathematical Society. s2-19 (2): 285–287. doi:10.1112/jlms/s2-19.2.285.

References