Characteristic Lie subring not implies ideal: Difference between revisions

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new generic context = Lie ring|
new generic context = Lie ring|
old fact = characteristic implies normal}}
old fact = characteristic implies normal}}
{{Lie subring property non-implication|
stronger = characteristic Lie subring|
weaker = ideal of a Lie ring}}


==Statement==
==Statement==
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* [[Characteristic not implies derivation-invariant]]
* [[Characteristic not implies derivation-invariant]]
* [[Derivation-invariant not implies characteristic]]
* [[Derivation-invariant not implies characteristic]]
===Opposite facts===
* [[Characteristic subring implies ideal in Lazard Lie ring]]


===Analogues in other algebraic structures===
===Analogues in other algebraic structures===

Latest revision as of 05:21, 27 July 2013

ANALOGY BREAKDOWN: This is the breakdown of the analogue in Lie rings of a fact encountered in group. The old fact is: characteristic implies normal.
View other analogue breakdowns of characteristic implies normal|View other analogue breakdowns from group to Lie ring

This article gives the statement and possibly, proof, of a non-implication relation between two Lie subring properties. That is, it states that every Lie subring satisfying the first Lie subring property (i.e., characteristic Lie subring) need not satisfy the second Lie subring property (i.e., ideal of a Lie ring)
View a complete list of Lie subring property non-implications | View a complete list of Lie subring property implications
Get more facts about characteristic Lie subring|Get more facts about ideal of a Lie ring

Statement

A characteristic subring of a Lie ring need not be an ideal of the Lie ring.

Related facts

Similar facts

Analogues in other algebraic structures

Proof

Example of the simple Witt algebra

Suppose is a prime number greater than 3. Let be the prime field for the prime . Denote by the simple Witt algebra for corresponding to the prime ; explicitly, this means that:

  • The additive group has basis . Explicitly, it is .
  • The Lie bracket is defined as follows on the basis:

Consider the "sandwich" Lie subring of given by:

  • is clearly a subring of .
  • is characteristic in , because (note that the set with this description is not always a subring, but in this case it is).
  • is not an ideal in : for instance, is not in . In fact, is simple, so it has no proper nonzero ideal.