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Latest revision as of 12:25, 14 June 2024

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Small ideals in radical theory
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    Small ideals in radical theory (English)
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    1984
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    In a ring with left or right identity an ideal is small if and only if it is contained in the Brown-McCoy radical. A ring is said to be small, if it is contained as a small ideal in some ring. The class of small rings coincides with that of all Brown-McCoy radical rings. Let \({\mathcal R}\) be a radical class and \({\mathcal S}\) its semisimple class. The following two conditions are examined: (*) if I is a small ideal in \(S\in {\mathcal S}\), then S/\(I\in {\mathcal S}\), (**) if I is a small ideal in A and A/\(I\in {\mathcal R}\), then \(A\in {\mathcal R}\). It is proved that (*) implies (**), but not conversely. The upper radical of a homomorphically closed regular class satisfies (**). If the semisimple class of a hereditary radical \({\mathcal R}\neq 0\) satisfies (*), then \({\mathcal R}\) is supernilpotent. If a hereditary supernilpotent radical class is contained in the Jacobson radical class, or if a supernilpotent radical class contains the Brown- McCoy radical class, then its semisimple class satisfies (*).
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    small ideal
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    small rings
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    Brown-McCoy radical rings
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    radical class
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    semisimple class
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    upper radical
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    homomorphically closed regular class
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    hereditary radical
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    supernilpotent radical
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    Jacobson radical
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