Zero-product property
In algebra, the zero-product property states that the product of two nonzero elements is nonzero. In other words, it is the following assertion:
If
, then
or
.
The zero-product property is also known as the rule of zero product, the null factor law or the nonexistence of nontrivial zero divisors. All of the number systems studied in elementary mathematics — the integers , the rational numbers
, the real numbers
, and the complex numbers
— satisfy the zero-product property. In general, a ring which satisfies the zero-product property is called a domain.
Algebraic context
Suppose is an algebraic structure. We might ask, does
have the zero-product property? In order for this question to have meaning,
must have both additive structure and multiplicative structure.[note 1] Usually one assumes that
is a ring, though it could be something else, e.g., the nonnegative integers
.
Note that if satisfies the zero-product property, and if
is a subset of
, then
also satisfies the zero product property: if
and
are elements of
such that
, then either
or
because
and
can also be considered as elements of
.
Examples
- A ring in which the zero-product property holds is called a domain. A commutative domain with a multiplicative identity element is called an integral domain. Any field is an integral domain; in fact, any subring of a field is an integral domain (as long as it contains 1). Similarly, any subring of a skew field is a domain. Thus, the zero-product property holds for any subring of a skew field.
- If
is a prime number, then the ring of integers modulo
has the zero-product property (in fact, it is a field).
- The Gaussian integers are an integral domain because they are a subring of the complex numbers.
- In the strictly skew field of quaternions, the zero-product property holds. This ring is not an integral domain, because the multiplication is not commutative.
- The set of nonnegative integers
is not a ring, but it does satisfy the zero-product property.
Non-examples
- Let
denote the ring of integers modulo
. Then
does not satisfy the zero product property: 2 and 3 are nonzero elements, yet
.
- In general, if
is a composite number, then
does not satisfy the zero-product property. Namely, if
where
, then
and
are nonzero modulo
, yet
.
- The ring
of 2 by 2 matrices with integer entries does not satisfy the zero-product property: if
and
,
- then
,
- yet neither
nor
is zero.
- The ring of all functions
, from the unit interval to the real numbers, has nontrivial zero divisors: there are pairs of functions which are not identically equal to zero yet whose product is the zero function. In fact, it is not hard to construct, for any n ≥ 2, functions
, none of which is identically zero, such that
is identically zero whenever
.
- The same is true even if we consider only continuous functions, or only even infinitely smooth functions.
Application to finding roots of polynomials
Suppose and
are univariate polynomials with real coefficients, and
is a real number such that
. (Actually, we may allow the coefficients and
to come from any integral domain.) By the zero-product property, it follows that either
or
. In other words, the roots of
are precisely the roots of
together with the roots of
.
Thus, one can use factorization to find the roots of a polynomial. For example, the polynomial factorizes as
; hence, its roots are precisely 3, 1, and -2.
In general, suppose is an integral domain and
is a monic univariate polynomial of degree
with coefficients in
. Suppose also that
has
distinct roots
. It follows (but we do not prove here) that
factorizes as
. By the zero-product property, it follows that
are the only roots of
: any root of
must be a root of
for some
. In particular,
has at most
distinct roots.
If however is not an integral domain, then the conclusion need not hold. For example, the cubic polynomial
has six roots in
(though it has only three roots in
).
See also
Notes
- ↑ There must be a notion of zero (the additive identity) and a notion of products, i.e., multiplication.
References
- David S. Dummit and Richard M. Foote, Abstract Algebra (3d ed.), Wiley, 2003, ISBN 0-471-43334-9.