Abstract
Abstract
An associative ring R is called potent provided that for every
$x\in R$
, there is an integer
$n(x)>1$
such that
$x^{n(x)}=x$
. A celebrated result of N. Jacobson is that every potent ring is commutative. In this note, we show that a ring R is potent if and only if every nonzero subring S of R contains a nonzero idempotent. We use this result to give a generalization of a recent result of Anderson and Danchev for reduced rings, which in turn generalizes Jacobson’s theorem.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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