Advances in Pure Mathematics, 2012, 2, 39-40
http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/apm.2012.21009 Published Online January 2012 (http://www.SciRP.org/journal/apm)
A Note on the (Faith-Menal) Counter Example
R. H. Sallam
Mathematics Department, Faculty of Science, Helwan University, Cairo, Egypt
Email: rsallams@hotmail.com
Received September 1, 2011; revised October 15, 2011; accepted October 22, 2011
ABSTRACT
Faith-Menal counter example is an example (unique) of a right John’s ring which is not right Artinian. In this paper we
show that the ring T which considered as an example of a right Johns ring in the (Faith-Menal) counter example is also
Artinian. The conclusion is that the unique counter example that says a right John’s ring can not be right Artinian is
false and the right Noetherian ring with the annihilator property rl(A) = A may be Artinian.
Keywords: John’s Ring; Artinian and Noetherian Rings
1. Introduction
A ring R is called right John’s ring if it is right Noethe-
rian and every right Ideal A of R is a right annihilator i.e.
rl(A) = A for all right ideals A of R.
John’s ([1], Theorem 1) by using a result of Kurshan
([2], Theorem 3.3), showed that a right Noetherian ring is
right Artinian provided that every right ideal is a right
annihilator.
Ginn [3] showed that Kurshan result was false. Ginn’s
example does not provide a counter example to John’s
theorem. Therefore the validity of John’s theorem was
doubtful.
Faith-Menal counter example proved that there is an
example (unique) of a right John’s ring which is not right
Artinian.
Here in this paper we prove the false of the Faith-
Menal counter example by proving that the considered
non-Artinian right john’s ring is in fact right Artinian. So
the John’s theorem may be true see [1].
All rings considered in this paper are associative rings
with identity.
We recall the Faith-Menal counter example in Section
1 and we prove that it is false in Section 2.
2. Section 1: The Counter Example
Example 8.16 (Faith-Menal) [4]. Let D be any countable,
extentially closed division ring over a field F, and let R =
DF
F
TRD
(x). Then T(R, D) is a non-Artinian right John’s ring.
Proof
Cohn shows that R is simple, principle right ideal do-
main that is right V ring (Theorems 8.4.5 & 5.5.5 [4])
and D is an R-R bimodule such that DR is the unique
simple right R module. Hence T(R, D) is a right John’s
ring by Theorem 8.15 (in this book). But T(R, D) is not
Artinian because if it were then R would also right
Artinian and hence a field which is a contradiction.
Here
and T0,d R
For more information about this example see [4].
3. Section 2: A Note on the Counter Example
Theorem
The right John’s ring T(R, D) defined in the counter ex-
ample is Artinian.
Proof
Recall the following (Exercises 10.7 [5]):
Let φ: DR be a ring homomorphism and let M be a
right R-module (or left R-module) then
1) Via φ M is right D-module;
2) If MD is Artinian or Noetherian then so is MR;
3) If R is finite dimensional algebra (via φ) over a field
D then the following is equivalent:
a) MR is Artinian and Noetherian
b) MR is finitely generated
c) MD is finite dimension
1) Consider the ring homomorphism φ: D R defined
by φ (d) = d
1f. Every R-module homomorphism is a
D-homomorphism via φ. Since D is a division ring so it
will be semisimple ring and hence every right D-module
is semisimple (Corollary 8.2.2 [3]).
2) If the ring TRD
is John’s ring (as in the coun-
ter example above) then it is Noetherian and hence R and D
are Noetherian. As D is right Noetherian ring then every
finitely generated right D module is Noetherian (6.1.3 [6]).
3) Every finitely generated right D-module M is semi-
simple so it is right Artinian.
C
opyright © 2012 SciRes. APM
R. H. SALLAM
40
4) Since every finitely generated right D-module M is
Artinian and Noetherian then M is Artinian and Noethe-
rian as an R-module.
5) Now since R is simple principle ideal domain then
R is a finite dimensional k-algebra where k is a subring
of the center of R with identity 1R and hence R is a finite
dimensional algebra over the field Z (D) the center of D.
Applying the above equivalence we get that every
finitely generated right R-module is Artinian and hence
R is right Artinian and this imply that T is also Artinian.
4. Conclusion
The conclusion is that the unique example that says a right
John’s ring can not be right Artinian is false.
REFERENCES
[1] B. Johns, “Annihilator Conditions in Noetherian Rings,”
Journal of Algebra, Vol. 49, No. 1, 1977, pp. 222-224.
doi:10.1016/0021-8693(77)90282-4
[2] R. P. Kurshan, “Rings Whose Cyclic Modules Have
Finitely Generated Socle,” Journal of Algebra, Vol. 15,
No. 3, 1970, pp. 376-386.
doi:10.1016/0021-8693(70)90066-9
[3] S. M. Ginn, “A Counter Example to a Theorem of Kur-
shAn,” Journal of Algebra, Vol. 40, No. 1, 1976, pp.
105-106. doi:10.1016/0021-8693(76)90090-9
[4] W. K. Nicholson and M. F. Yousif, “Quasi-Frobenius
Rings,” Series Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics, No.
158, 2003.
[5] F. W. Anderson and K. R. Fuller, “Rings and Categories
of Module,” Springer Verlag, New York, 1991.
[6] F. Kasch, “Modules and Rings, London Mathematical
Society Monographs,” Vol. 17, Academic Press, New
York, 1982.
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