Kernel of ring homomorphism

https://arbital.com/p/kernel_of_ring_homomorphism

by Patrick Stevens Aug 3 2016 updated Aug 4 2016

The kernel of a ring homomorphism is the collection of things which that homomorphism sends to 0.


[summary: The kernel of a [-ring_homomorphism] is the collection of elements which the homomorphism sends to 0.]

Given a [-ring_homomorphism] f:RS between rings R and S, we say the kernel of f is the collection of elements of R which f sends to the zero element of S.

Formally, it is {rRf(r)=0S} where 0S is the zero element of S.

Examples

Properties

Kernels of ring homomorphisms are very important because they are precisely [ideal_ring_theory ideals]. (Proof.) In a way, "ideal" is to "ring" as "Subgroup" is to "group", and certainly [subring_ring_theory subrings] are much less interesting than ideals; a lot of ring theory is about the study of ideals.

The kernel of a ring homomorphism always contains , because a ring homomorphism always sends to . This is because it may be viewed as a Group homomorphism acting on the underlying additive group of the ring in question, and the image of the identity is the identity in a group.

If the kernel of a ring homomorphism contains , then the ring homomorphism sends everything to . Indeed, if , then .