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We show that Ringrose's diagonal ideals are primitive ideals in a nest algebra (subject to the continuum hypothesis). This answers an old question of Lance and provides for the first time concrete descriptions of enough primitive ideals to obtain the Jacobson radical as their intersection. Separately, we provide a standard form for all left ideals of a nest algebra, which leads to insights into the maximal left ideals. In the case of atomic nest algebras, we show how primitive ideals can be categorized by their behaviour on the diagonal and provide concrete examples of all types.
A ring is called right annelidan if the right annihilator of any subset of the ring is comparable with every other right ideal. In this paper we develop the connections between this class of rings and the classes of right Bézout rings and rings whose right ideals form a distributive lattice. We obtain results on localization of right annelidan rings at prime ideals, chain conditions that entail left-right symmetry of the annelidan condition, and construction of completely prime ideals.
We prove that an integral Jacobson radical ring is always nil, which extends a well-known result from algebras over fields to rings. As a consequence we show that if every element x of a ring R is a zero of some polynomial px with integer coefficients, such that px(1) = 1, then R is a nil ring. With these results we are able to give new characterizations of the upper nilradical of a ring and a new class of rings that satisfy the Köthe conjecture: namely, the integral rings.
We provide necessary and sufficient conditions for a skew polynomial ring of derivation type to be semiprimitive when the base ring has no nonzero nil ideals. This extends existing results on the Jacobson radical of skew polynomial rings of derivation type.
We prove that if H is a finite-dimensional semisimple Hopf algebra acting on a PI-algebra R of characteristic 0, and R is either affine or algebraic over k, then the Jacobson radical of R is H-stable. Under the same hypotheses, we show that the smash product algebra R#H is semiprimitive provided that R is H-semiprime. More generally we show that the ‘finite’ Jacobson radical is H-stable, and that R#H is semiprimitive provided that R is H-semiprimitive and all irreducible representations of R are finite-dimensional. We also consider R#H when R is an FCR-algebra. Finally, we prove a general relationship between stability of the radical and semiprimeness of R#H; in particular if for a given H, any action of H stabilizes the Jacobson radical, then also any action of H stabilizes the prime radical.
It is shown that the adjoint group ${{R}^{{}^\circ }}$ of an arbitrary radical ring $R$ has a series with abelian factors and that its finite subgroups are nilpotent. Moreover, some criteria for subgroups of ${{R}^{{}^\circ }}$ to be locally nilpotent are given.
The relations between the adjoint group and the additive group of a radical ring and its nilpotency are investigated. It is shown that certain finiteness conditions carry over from the adjoint group to the additive group and that the converse holds for the class of minimax groups.
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