Wednesday, February 11, 2026

What is Ideal

At first: What is Ring

A ring is an algebraic structure consisting of a set together with two binary operations, typically called addition and multiplication.

Ring

  • A set R
  • Two binary operations on R
    • Addition ( + )
    • Multiplication (  )

Two binary operations

A binary operation on a set S is a function
:S×SSwhere
input: (a,b)S×S
output: abS
It is a binary function that maps every pair of elements of the set to an element of the same set.


Ring again
More precisely, a ring is a triple
(R,+,)such that:

  1. (R,+) is an abelian group.
  2. (R,) is associative.
  3. The distributive laws hold:
    a(b+c)=ab+ac(a+b)c=ac+bc

What does “abelian group” mean?

A set G with a binary operation  is a group if:

  1. Associativity:
    (ab)c=a(bc)
  2. Identity element:
    There exists an element eG such that
    ea=ae=a
  3. Inverse element:
    For every aG, there exists a1G such that
    aa1=a1a=e

The group is called abelian if it is also commutative:

ab=ba

In a ring, (R,+) must satisfy all of these properties.


What does “associative” mean?

An operation is associative if changing parentheses does not change the result:

(ab)c=a(bc)

Multiplication in a ring must be associative, but it does not need to be commutative and does not need to have inverses.

Examples

Set of integers

The set of integers Z is a ring because:

  1. (Z,+) is an abelian group:

    • Addition is associative:
      (a+b)+c=a+(b+c)
    • There exists an identity element 0:
      a+0=a
    • Every integer has an additive inverse:
      a+(a)=0
    • Addition is commutative:
      a+b=b+a
  2. Multiplication is associative:
    (ab)c=a(bc)

  3. The distributive laws hold:
    a(b+c)=ab+ac
    (a+b)c=ac+bc

2×2 Matrices

The set of all 2×2 matrices with entries in a ring (for example, R or Z) forms a ring.

  • Matrix addition makes (M2(R),+) an abelian group.
  • Matrix multiplication is associative:
    (AB)C=A(BC)
  • The distributive laws hold:
    A(B+C)=AB+AC
    (A+B)C=AC+BC

However, matrix multiplication is generally not commutative:

ABBA

Therefore, the ring of 2×2 matrices is a non-commutative ring.

What is ideal

An ideal is a special subset of a ring.

Let R be a ring. A subset IR is called an ideal if:

  1. I is closed under addition:
    a,bIa+bI

  2. I absorbs multiplication from elements of R:
    rR, aIraI

This property is called the absorption property.
An ideal is to rings what a normal subgroup is to groups.

Intuition

An ideal is a collection of elements that can be treated as “zero” when forming a quotient ring.

If I is an ideal of R, we can construct the quotient ring:

R/I

In this new ring, every element of I becomes equal to zero.

Examples

Ideal in Z

Consider the ring Z (a set of all integers).

Define:

2Z={2nnZ}

This is the set of all even integers.

It is an ideal because:

  • The sum of even integers is even.
  • Any integer multiplied by an even integer is even:
    r(2n)=2(rn)

Non-commutative Example

The ring of 2×2 matrices forms a ring, but multiplication is not commutative:

ABBA

In non-commutative rings, one distinguishes between:

  • Left ideals: raI
  • Right ideals: arI
  • Two-sided ideals: both conditions hold

Only two-sided ideals can be used to form quotient rings.