Definition and Criterion of Subrings
Definition 1
A subset of a ring is called a subring of if it satisfies the conditions of a ring with respect to the operations of .
Meanwhile, it is trivial that and are subrings of the ring , hence and are referred to as trivial subrings ().
Theorem: Subring Criterion
For a non-empty subset of a ring , if whenever is an element of , is also an element of , then is a subring of . That is, if is closed under subtraction and multiplication, it is a subring of .
Proof
Assume that when is an element of the subset , is also an element of .
- By assumption, according to the subgroup criterion, is a group under addition.
- The operations of are the same as those of the ring , so it is trivially commutative.
- It is also trivially closed under multiplication by assumption.
- Since the operations of subset are the same as those of the ring , it is also trivial that the associative law for multiplication holds.
- For the same reasons, it is natural that the distributive laws for addition and multiplication hold within the subset .
From 1 to 5, since the subset is closed under both operations, is an Abelian group under addition, and satisfies the associative law for multiplication, and the distributive laws for both addition and multiplication, is a ring. Therefore, the subset is a subring of .
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Fraleigh. (2003). A first course in abstract algebra(7th Edition): p173. ↩︎