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Matrix ring - Wikipedia

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In abstract algebra, a matrix ring is a set of matrices with entries in a ring R that form a ring under matrix addition and matrix multiplication (Lam 1999). The set of all n × n matrices with entries in R is a matrix ring denoted Mn(R)[1][2][3][4] (alternative notations: Matn(R)[2] and Rn×n[5]). Some sets of infinite matrices form infinite matrix rings. Any subring of a matrix ring is a matrix ring. Over a rng, one can form matrix rngs.

When R is a commutative ring, the matrix ring Mn(R) is an associative algebra over R, and may be called a matrix algebra. In this setting, if M is a matrix and r is in R, then the matrix rM is the matrix M with each of its entries multiplied by r.

Examples[edit]

Structure[edit]

Properties[edit]

Matrix semiring[edit]

In fact, R needs to be only a semiring for Mn(R) to be defined. In this case, Mn(R) is a semiring, called the matrix semiring. Similarly, if R is a commutative semiring, then Mn(R) is a matrix semialgebra.

For example, if R is the Boolean semiring (the two-element Boolean algebra R = {0,1} with 1 + 1 = 1), then Mn(R) is the semiring of binary relations on an n-element set with union as addition, composition of relations as multiplication, the empty relation (zero matrix) as the zero, and the identity relation (identity matrix) as the unit.[7]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lam, A first course on noncommutative rings, 2nd edition, Springer, 2001; Theorem 3.1.
  2. ^ a b Lang, Undergraduate algebra, Springer, 2005; V.§3.
  3. ^ Serre, Lie algebras and Lie groups, 2nd edition, corrected 5th printing, Springer, 2006; p. 3.
  4. ^ Serre, Local fields, Springer, 1979; p. 158.
  5. ^ Artin, Algebra, Pearson, 2018; Example 3.3.6(a).
  6. ^ Lecture VII of Sir William Rowan Hamilton, Lectures on quaternions, Hodges and Smith, 1853.
  7. ^ Droste, M., & Kuich, W. (2009). Semirings and Formal Power Series. Handbook of Weighted Automata, 3–28. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-01492-5_1, pp. 7–10