(mathematics) An ideal I in a ring R which is not equal to R, and such that there is no ideal containing I and not equal to I or R.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: maximal ideal |
(mathematics) An ideal I in a ring R which is not equal to R, and such that there is no ideal containing I and not equal to I or R.
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| Wikipedia: Maximal ideal |
In mathematics, more specifically in ring theory, a maximal ideal is an ideal which is maximal (with respect to set inclusion) amongst all proper ideals. In other words, if R is a ring with a maximal ideal I, and if J is another ideal containing I as a subset, then either J = I or J = R. So there are no ideals "in between" I and R.
Maximal ideals are important because the quotient rings of maximal ideals are simple rings, and in the special case of unital commutative rings they are also fields. Rings which contain only one maximal ideal are called local rings.
Given a ring R and a proper ideal I of R (that is I ≠ R), I is called a maximal ideal of R if there exists no other proper ideal J of R so that I ⊂ J.
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is not a field.This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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Some good "Maximal ideal" pages on the web:
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