Let p be a prime. Prove that every commutative ring with the identity and p elements is a domain.
Any help or hints on how to get started would be great thanks
Thanks for any help
Any help or hints on how to get started would be great thanks Thanks for any help |
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By Lagrange, the order of the subgroup$\rm\: G = \{r:rs=0\}\:$ divides $\rm\:|(A,+)| = p\:$ prime. Thus $\rm\:|G| = p\ (\Rightarrow 1\cdot s = 0)\:$ or $\rm\:|G| = 1\ (\Rightarrow\ rs\ne 0\ \ if\ \ r,s\ne0)$. |
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HINT If the ring has $p$ elements, then its additive structure must be cyclic of order $p$; hence, since $1_R\neq 0$, $1$ will generate the ring additively. So every element of the ring is of the form $n\cdot 1_R$, with $0\leq n\lt p$. Show this determines the multiplication and that your ring must in fact be $\mathbb{F}_p$, the field with $p$ elements. |
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Consider $a\in R$ and the map $\mu : x \mapsto ax$. This is an endomorphism of the additive group of $R$. If $a\ne0$, the image of $\mu$ is not $0$ because $\mu(1)=a$. Since $R$ has $p$ elements, the image must be the whole of $R$. In particular, there is $b$ such that $ab=1$ and $R$ is a field. Alternatively, the kernel must be $0$ and $R$ is a domain. |
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The surjective ringhomomorphism $\mathbb Z \rightarrow R$, $1\mapsto 1_R$ must have non-trivial Kernel $n\mathbb Z $, such that $\mathbb Z/n\mathbb Z = R$ has $p$ elements. Therefore $n=p$ and $R=\mathbb Z/p\mathbb Z=\mathbb F_p$ |
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