Datasets:
Tasks:
Text Generation
Modalities:
Text
Sub-tasks:
language-modeling
Languages:
English
Size:
100K - 1M
License:
In abstract algebra, Jacobson's conjecture is an open problem in ring theory concerning the intersection of powers of the Jacobson radical of a Noetherian ring. | |
It has only been proven for special types of Noetherian rings, so far. Examples exist to show that the conjecture can fail when the ring is not Noetherian on a side, so it is absolutely necessary for the ring to be two-sided Noetherian. | |
The conjecture is named for the algebraist Nathan Jacobson who posed the first version of the conjecture. | |
For a ring R with Jacobson radical J, the nonnegative powers $J^n$ are defined by using the product of ideals. | |
Jacobson's conjecture: In a right-and-left Noetherian ring, $\bigcap_{n\in \mathbb{N}}J^n=\{0\}.$ | |
In other words: "The only element of a Noetherian ring in all powers of J is 0." | |
The original conjecture posed by Jacobson in 1956 asked about noncommutative one-sided Noetherian rings, however Israel Nathan Herstein produced a counterexample in 1965, and soon afterwards, Arun Vinayak Jategaonkar produced a different example which was a left principal ideal domain. From that point on, the conjecture was reformulated to require two-sided Noetherian rings. | |
Jacobson's conjecture has been verified for particular types of Noetherian rings: | |
* Commutative Noetherian rings all satisfy Jacobson's conjecture. This is a consequence of the Krull intersection theorem. | |
* Fully bounded Noetherian rings | |
* Noetherian rings with Krull dimension 1 | |
* Noetherian rings satisfying the second layer condition | |