Heredity of radicals in a class of noncommutative Jordan rings (Q1896987): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 11:14, 30 July 2024
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English | Heredity of radicals in a class of noncommutative Jordan rings |
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Heredity of radicals in a class of noncommutative Jordan rings (English)
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12 September 1995
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A ring is called noncommutative Jordan if it satisfies the identities \((x, y, x)= (x^2, y, x)= 0\). Let \(R\) be an associative commutative ring containing \(1/6\) and \({\mathcal M}\) the class of noncommutative Jordan rings over \(R\) satisfying the identity \(([x, y], z,z) =0\). The author proves that if \(r\) is a radical in \({\mathcal M}\) then an ideal of an \(r\)- semisimple ring is \(r\)-semisimple. This implies that the locally nilpotent radical in \({\mathcal M}\) is hereditary. (The existence of the locally nilpotent radical in \({\mathcal M}\) has been proved by \textit{I. P. Shestakov} [Algebra Logic 10, 252-280 (1973); translation from Algebra Logika 10, 407-448 (1971; Zbl 0259.17001)]).
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hereditary radicals
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noncommutative Jordan rings
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locally nilpotent radical
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