Unique factorization domain


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In mathematics, a unique factorization domain (UFD) is, roughly speaking, a commutative ring in which every element can be uniquely written as a product of prime elements, analogous to the fundamental theorem of arithmetic for the integers.

Formally, a unique factorization domain is defined to be an integral domain R in which every non-zero non-unit x of R can be written as a product of irreducible elements of R:

x = p1 p2 ... pn

and this representation is unique in the following sense: if q1,...,qm are irreducible elements of R such that

x = q1 q2 ... qm,

then m = n and there exists a bijective map φ : {1,...,n} -> {1,...,n} such that pi is associated to qφ(i) for i=1,...,n.

The uniqueness part is sometimes hard to verify, which is why the following equivalent definition is useful: a unique factorization domain is an integral domain R in which every non-zero non-unit can be written as a product of prime elements of R.

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Examples

Most rings familiar from elementary mathematics are UFD's:

Here are some more exotic examples of UFDs:

Despite these examples, very few integral domains are UFDs. Here are a few counterexamples:

<math>K[X,Y]/(Y^2 - X^2 + 1),<math>
where K is a field. Then Y2 factors as YY and as (X - 1)(X + 1). Most factor rings of a polynomial ring are not UFDs.
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Properties

Additional examples of UFDs can be constructed as follows:

Some concepts defined for integers can be generalized to UFDs:





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