On the Drazin index of regular elements (Q1040196): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 05:48, 2 July 2024

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On the Drazin index of regular elements
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    On the Drazin index of regular elements (English)
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    24 November 2009
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    Let \(R\) denote a ring with unity 1. An element \(a\in R\) is regular if \(a\in aRa\), and if some power of \(a\) is regular, then \(a\) is weak-regular. An element \(a\) is Drazin invertible if the three equations \(xax= x\), \(ax= xa\), \(a^kxa= a^k\) have a common solution \(x= a^D\) for some integer \(k\geq 0\). It is well-known that if \(a^D\) exists, it is unique. The minimum \(k\) fulfilling the above is the Drazin index \(i(a)\) of \(a\). The authors relate the Drazin index of \(a\) to the Drazin index of \(a^2 a^-+ 1- aa^-\). They also give an alternative characterization when considering matrices over an algebraically closed field, and close with some questions and remarks.
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    Drazin inverse
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    Drazin index
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    Dedekind finite ring
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    regular ring
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