I see the following notation: for a ring A , a prime ideal <mi mathvariant="fraktur">q

lasquiyas5loaa

lasquiyas5loaa

Answered question

2022-04-12

I see the following notation: for a ring A , a prime ideal q ,, and x A.
( q : x ) = ( 1 ) .
The question is: what does ( q : x ) mean? The ideal generated by q , x ? Then why do we need to use a colon?

Answer & Explanation

TettetoxDetnhte5

TettetoxDetnhte5

Beginner2022-04-13Added 15 answers

For a ring R, my guess would be
( q : x ) = { r R : r x q }
Since I've seen the same notation used for subsets I , J R
( I : J ) = { r R : r J I }
Osmarq5ltp

Osmarq5ltp

Beginner2022-04-14Added 6 answers

My guess is that the statement should have been
( q : x ) = { q if  x q ( 1 ) if  x q

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