IntroductionRings of polynomials over fields have many special properties; properties that follow from the fact that polynomial rings are not, in some sense, "too large". Emmy Noether first discovered that the key property of polynomial rings is the ascending chain condition on ideals. Noetherian rings are named after her. For noncommutative rings, we must distinguish between three very similar concepts:
For commutative rings, all three concepts coincide, but in general they are different. There are rings that are left-Noetherian and not right-Noetherian, and vice versa. Characterizations of Noetherian ringsThere are other, equivalent, definitions for a ring R to be left-Noetherian:
Similar results hold for right-Noetherian rings. It is also known that for a commutative ring to be Noetherian it suffices that every prime ideal of the ring is finitely generated. Uses of Noetherian ringsThe Noetherian property is central in ring theory and in areas that make heavy use of rings, such as algebraic geometry. The reason behind this is that the Noetherian property is in some sense the ring-theoretic analogue of finiteness. For example, the Noetherian-ness of polynomial rings over a field allows us to prove that any infinite set of polynomial equations can be replaced with a finite set with the same solutions. As another application, we mention Krull's principal ideal theorem: Every principal ideal in a commutative Noetherian ring has height one. This early result was the first to suggest that Noetherian rings possessed a deep theory of dimension. Examples
Rings that are not Noetherian tend to be (in some sense) very large. Here are two examples of non-Noetherian rings:
Properties
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