Unit (ring theory) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, a unit in a ring R is an element u such that there is v in R with
- uv = vu = 1R.
The orbits of U(R) acting on R by multiplication are called sets of associates; in other words there is an equivalence relation on R called associatedness such that
- r ~ s
Any root of unity is a unit. In algebraic number theory Dirichlet's unit theorem shows the existence of many units in most rings of algebraic integers. For example, we have
- (√5 + 2)(√5 - 2) = 1.
One can check that U is a functor from the category of rings, to the category of groups: a ring homomorphism must map units to units. It has a left adjoint, the integral group ring construction.
This is an Article on Unit (ring theory). Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Unit (ring theory)
