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Trivial Ring


A ring defined on a singleton set {*}. The ring operations (multiplication and addition) are defined in the only possible way,

 *·*=*,
(1)

and

 *+*=*.
(2)

It follows that this is a commutative unit ring, where * is the multiplicative identity. Of course, * also coincides with the additive identity, i.e., it is the so-called zero element of the ring. For this reason, the trivial ring is often denoted {0} and also called the zero ring. In fact, the subset {0} is the only trivial subring of the ring of integers Z.

A unit ring R is trivial whenever 1=0, since this equality implies that for all a in R

 a=a·1=a·0=0.
(3)

A trivial ring is a trivial module over itself.


See also

Trivial, Trivial Module

This entry contributed by Margherita Barile

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Cite this as:

Barile, Margherita. "Trivial Ring." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource, created by Eric W. Weisstein. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/TrivialRing.html

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