Ideal of a Lie ring

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This article describes a Lie subring property: a property that can be evaluated for a subring of a Lie ring
View a complete list of such properties
VIEW RELATED: Lie subring property implications | Lie subring property non-implications | Lie subring metaproperty satisfactions | Lie subring metaproperty dissatisfactions | Lie subring property satisfactions |Lie subring property dissatisfactions

ANALOGY: This is an analogue in Lie ring of a property encountered in group. Specifically, it is a Lie subring property analogous to the subgroup property: normal subgroup
View other analogues of normal subgroup | View other analogues in Lie rings of subgroup properties (OR, View as a tabulated list)

Definition

A subset B of a Lie ring A is termed an ideal in A if B is additively a subgroup and [x,y]B whenever xB and yA.

Relation with properties in related algebraic structures

Lie algebra

Further information: Ideal of a Lie algebra

A Lie algebra is a Lie ring that is simultaneously (i.e., with the same operations) an algebra over a field. An ideal of a Lie algebra is an ideal of the underlying Lie ring that is also a linear subspace, i.e., it is closed under multiplication by scalars in the field.

Ring whose commutator operation is the Lie bracket

Suppose R is an associative ring: an abelian group with a distributive associative multiplication. We can define the Lie ring associated with R as R with the same addition and wit hthe Lie bracket given by the commutator operation [x,y]=xyyx.

Then, the property of being an ideal of the Lie ring is equivalent to the property of being a Lie ideal in R. Being a Lie ideal is weaker than being a two-sided ideal. It is incomparable with the property of being a left ideal or being a right ideal. Moreover, a subset that is both a left ideal and a Lie ideal is two-sided ideal. Similarly, a subset that is both a right ideal and a Lie ideal is a two-sided ideal.

Group via the Lazard correspondence

Suppose G is a Lazard Lie group and L is its Lazard Lie ring. Under the natural bijection from L to G, the ideals of L correspond to the normal subgroups of G.

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

Weaker properties