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In abstract algebra, a nonzero element a of a ring is a left zero divisor if there exists a nonzero b such that ab = 0[1]. Right zero divisors are defined analogously, that is, a nonzero element a of a ring is a right zero divisor if there exists a nonzero c such that ca = 0. An element that is both a left and a right zero divisor is simply called a zero divisor. If multiplication in the ring is commutative, then the left and right zero divisors are the same. A nonzero element of a ring that is neither left nor right zero divisor is called regular.
[edit] Examples
because for instance
Continuing with this example, note that while RL is a left zero divisor ((RL)T = R(LT) is 0 because LT is), LR is not a zero divisor on either side because it is the identity. Concretely, we can interpret additive maps from S to S as countably infinite matrices. The matrix realizes L explicitly (just apply the matrix to a vector and see the effect is exactly a left shift) and the transpose B = AT realizes the right shift on S. That AB is the identity matrix is the same as saying LR is the identity. In particular, as matrices A is a left zero divisor but not a right zero divisor. [edit] PropertiesLeft or right zero divisors can never be units, because if a is invertible and ab = 0, then 0 = a−10 = a−1ab = b. Every nonzero idempotent element a ≠ 1 is a zero divisor, since a2 = a implies a(a − 1) = (a − 1)a = 0. Nonzero nilpotent ring elements are also trivially zero divisors. A commutative ring with 0 ≠ 1 and without zero divisors is called an integral domain. Zero divisors occur in the quotient ring Z/nZ if and only if n is composite. When n is prime, there are no zero divisors and this ring is, in fact, a field, as every nonzero element is a unit. Zero divisors also occur in the sedenions, or 16-dimensional hypercomplex numbers under the Cayley-Dickson construction. Set of zero divisors is a union of prime ideals. [edit] See also[edit] Notes
[edit] References
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