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In mathematics, a unit in a ring R is an element u such that there is v in R with
That is, u is an invertible element of the multiplicative monoid of R. The units of R form a group U(R) under multiplication, the group of units of R.
Any root of unity is a unit. In algebraic number theory Dirichlet's unit theorem shows the existence of many units in most rings of algebraic integers. For example, we have
In fact that is the source for the unit terminology — which shouldn't be confused with the 'unit' of unital rings.
One can check that U is a functor from the category of rings, to the category of groups: a ring homomorphism must map units to units. It has a left adjoint, the integral group ring construction.