Differential ring: Difference between revisions
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A ''differential ring homomorphism'' is a ring homomorphism ''f'' from differential ring (''R'',''D'') to (''S'',''d'') such that ''f''·''D'' = ''d''·''f''. A ''differential ideal'' is an ideal ''I'' of ''R'' such that ''D''(''I'') is contained in ''I''. | A ''differential ring homomorphism'' is a ring homomorphism ''f'' from differential ring (''R'',''D'') to (''S'',''d'') such that ''f''·''D'' = ''d''·''f''. A ''differential ideal'' is an ideal ''I'' of ''R'' such that ''D''(''I'') is contained in ''I''.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 7 August 2024
In ring theory, a differential ring is a ring with added structure which generalises the concept of derivative.
Formally, a differential ring is a ring R with an operation D on R which is a derivation:
Examples
- Every ring is a differential ring with the zero map as derivation.
- The formal derivative makes the polynomial ring R[X] over R a differential ring with
Ideal
A differential ring homomorphism is a ring homomorphism f from differential ring (R,D) to (S,d) such that f·D = d·f. A differential ideal is an ideal I of R such that D(I) is contained in I.