Ordered rings are familiar from arithmetic. Examples include the integers, the rationals and the real numbers.[2] (The rationals and reals in fact form ordered fields.) The complex numbers, in contrast, do not form an ordered ring or field, because there is no inherent order relationship between the elements 1 and i.
Positive elements
In analogy with the real numbers, we call an element c of an ordered ring Rpositive if 0 < c, and negative if c < 0. 0 is considered to be neither positive nor negative.
The set of positive elements of an ordered ring R is often denoted by R+. An alternative notation, favored in some disciplines, is to use R+ for the set of nonnegative elements, and R++ for the set of positive elements.
Absolute value
If is an element of an ordered ring R, then the absolute value of , denoted , is defined thus:
A discrete ordered ring or discretely ordered ring is an ordered ring in which there is no element between 0 and 1. The integers are a discrete ordered ring, but the rational numbers are not.
Basic properties
For all a, b and c in R:
If a ≤ b and 0 ≤ c, then ac ≤ bc.[3] This property is sometimes used to define ordered rings instead of the second property in the definition above.
An ordered ring that is not trivial is infinite.[5]
Exactly one of the following is true: a is positive, −a is positive, or a = 0.[6] This property follows from the fact that ordered rings are abelian, linearly ordered groups with respect to addition.
In an ordered ring, no negative element is a square:[7] Firstly, 0 is square. Now if a ≠ 0 and a = b2 then b ≠ 0 and a = (−b)2; as either b or −b is positive, a must be nonnegative.
See also
Ordered field – Algebraic object with an ordered structure
Ordered group – Group with a compatible partial orderPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets