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Ring homomorphism

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In abstract algebra, a ring homomorphism is a function between two rings which respects the operations of addition and multiplication.

More precisely, if R and S are rings, then a ring homomorphism is a function f : RS such that

(If one does not require rings to have a multiplicative identity then the last condition is dropped.)

The composition of two ring homomorphisms is a ring homomorphism. It follows that the class of all rings forms a category with ring homomorphisms as the morphisms.

Properties

Directly from these definitions, one can deduce:

Examples

Types of ring homomorphisms

Injective ring homomorphisms are identical to monomorphisms in the category of rings: If f:RS is a monomorphism which is not injective, then it sends some r1 and r2 to the same element of S. Consider the two maps g1 and g2 from Z[x] to R which map x to r1 and r2, respectively; f o g1 and f o g2 are identical, but since f is a monomorphism this is impossible.

However, surjective ring homomorphisms are vastly different from epimorphisms in the category of rings. For example, the inclusion ZQ is a ring epimorphism, but not a surjection. However, they are exactly the same as the strong epimorphisms.

See also

 


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