Prime element of a ring

Written by Patrick Stevens, et al. last updated

An element of an integral domain is prime if it has the property that implies or . Equivalently, if its generated ideal is prime in the sense that implies either or is in .

Be aware that "prime" in ring theory does not correspond exactly to "prime" in number theory (the correct abstraction of which is irreducibility). It is the case that they are the same concept in the ring of integers (proof), but this is a nontrivial property that turns out to be equivalent to the fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic (proof).

Examples

Properties

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