SBI ring
Appearance
In algebra, an SBI ring is a ring R (with identity) such that every idempotent of R modulo the Jacobson radical can be lifted to R. The abbreviation SBI was introduced by Irving Kaplansky and stands for "suitable for building idempotent elements".[1]
Examples
[edit]- Any ring with nil radical is SBI.
- Any Banach algebra is SBI: more generally, so is any compact topological ring.
- The ring of rational numbers with odd denominator, and more generally, any local ring, is SBI.
Citations
[edit]- ^ Jacobson (1956), p. 53
References
[edit]- Jacobson, Nathan (1956), Structure of rings, American Mathematical Society, Colloquium Publications, vol. 37, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-1037-8, MR 0081264, Zbl 0073.02002
- Kaplansky, Irving (1972), Fields and Rings, Chicago Lectures in Mathematics (2nd ed.), University Of Chicago Press, pp. 124–125, ISBN 0-226-42451-0, Zbl 1001.16500