1. Introduction and Basic Results
Consider an associative ring
with its center located at
. In this ring, given any elements
ℓ and
, we define
as the commutator
and
as the anti-commutator
. It is worth noting that a ring
is classified as prime if
implies that either
ℓ or
is zero. Similarly,
is termed semiprime if, for any
,
implies that
ℓ itself is zero. These definitions and concepts are significant in understanding the properties and behavior of elements within the ring
. An additive mapping
is called a derivation if
holds for all
In the paper by Daif [
1], a concept known as a multiplicative derivation was introduced. A mapping
is classified as a multiplicative derivation if the condition
is satisfied for all elements
in the ring
. Note that these maps are not additive. Considering a ring
which consists of all continuous functions mapping the interval
to either real or complex numbers, we define a map
as follows:
Although is a multiplicative derivation, it fails to be additive, meaning that it does not satisfy the complete definition of a derivation, that is, the multiplicative derivation is more general than the concept of derivation.
Numerous findings in the literature have affirmed that certain subsets of a ring
, determined by certain conditions of commutativity, are required to align with the center
. These subsets are termed center-like subsets. One example of such a set is denoted as
, defined as the set of elements
such that
for all
, where
represents a derivation. This set was introduced by Herstein, who demonstrated in [
2] that if
is a prime ring free of 2-torsion, then
coincides with the center
of the ring.
In [
3], Herstein stated that the hypercenter
coincides with the center
of
. In [
4], Chacron stated that the cohypercenter
Several generalizations of the center of a ring have been introduced by Giambruno [
5], who defined the enlarged hypercenter of
to be the set
and showed that it is equal to
when
has no nonzero nil ideals. Moreover, he defined the generalized center of a ring
as
and proved that
if
has no non-zero nil right ideals.
In [
6], the authors proved that a semiprime ring must be commutative if there exits a derivation
on
such that
for all
Motivated by these results, ref. [
7] defined the following subsets of a ring
equipped with a derivation
:
Hence, it has been proved that if
is a semiprime ring, then
. Moreover, if
is a prime ring, then
. Based on these studies, Idrissi et al. [
8] defined the following center-like subsets:
where
is a derivation of
. Hence, they proved that if
is a 2-torsion-free prime ring, then
. Moreover, if
, then
.
Nabiel [
9] defined the following center-like subsets:
where
T a is homomorphism of
and
is a generalized derivation of
. He also proved the relations between these subsets and the central subset.
Recently, in [
10], Zemzami, Oukhtite, and Bell introduced and studied the following new centerlike subsets:
They proved that if is a 2-torsion-free prime ring, ℑ is a non-zero right ideal, there are derivations on , and or , then
In this paper, we first discuss the definition of the Jordan product based on the above center-like subsets. We change the commutator product in these sets and define the new center-like subsets as follows:
where
is the derivation on
. We examine the relationship between the central set of these sets for both derivation and multiplicative derivation.
Various results in the literature indicate how the global structure of a ring is often tightly connected to the behavior of derivations defined on . Many results in the literature have proved that some subsets of a ring defined by certain sort of commutativity condition coincide with its center . Based on these studies, researchers have discussed the center set and sets of commutativity conditions, managing to compare each one of the above subsets with the center of for the class of prime (semiprime) rings with some additional assumptions.
Here, we establish relations that have not previously been established between the center-like subsets mentioned above. In addition, the existing relations are proven for multiplicative derivations of the semiprime ring.
There is a relationship between these sets, as follows:
and
Fact: Assuming that is a semiprime ring, then:
- (i)
No non-zero nilpotent elements are found in the center of
- (ii)
If P is a nonzero prime ideal of and such that , then either or
- (iii)
The center of contains the center of a non-zero one-sided ideal; specifically, the center contains any commutative one-sided ideal of .
Without elaboration, the following fundamental identities are employed throughout this paper:
- (i)
- (ii)
- (iii)
- (iv)
2. Center-like Subsets in Semiprime and Prime Rings
Lemma 1 ([
11], Lemma 2 (b)).
If is a semiprime ring, then the center of a nonzero ideal of is contained in the center of . Lemma 2 ([
12], Lemma 3.1).
Let be a 2-torsion-free semiprime ring and ℑ a left ideal of . If , then the relation for all implies that for all . In all previous studies,
has been proven based on
. In this paper, it is instead proved by considering the set itself. In addition, the following theorem is a generalization of Theorem 1 from ([
9]) and Theorem 2.1 from ([
6]).
Theorem 1. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and a multiplicative derivation of Then,
Proof. We can easily show that Hence, we need only prove that
Let
Per the hypothesis, we obtain
Replacing
ℓ in this equation with
, we obtain
thus,
Using Equation (
1), we have
Writing
ℓ for
,
in the last equation and above equation, respectively, we have
Taking
for
in (
2), we can see that
thus,
Because
is semiprime, we must have a family
of prime ideals such that
If
P is a typical member of
then we have
from Fact (ii). Assuming that
and using Equation (
1), for all
we obtain
Using Equation (
1), we find that
Using the fact that
and that
P is the ideal of R, we have
for all
, that is,
Either of these conditions implies that
for any
Thus, we can conclude that
and consequently that
Replacing
ℓ in this equation with
, we have
thus,
Because
is semiprime ring, we obtain
Using this equation in (
2), we arrive at
Replacing
ℓ in this equation with
, we find that
Multiplying the left-hand side of the previous equation by
we have
Subtracting the last two equalities, we arrive at
hence,
Because
is semiprime ring, we have
thus,
which implies that
The semiprime of
indicates that
for all
; thus,
. From Lemma 1, we have
while using Equation (
1) we have
Again from Lemma 1, we have
Thus, we can conclude that
□
Theorem 2. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and a multiplicative derivation of ; then,
Proof. Because is multiplicative derivation of , is a multiplicative derivation of From Theorem 1, we can conclude that □
Corollary 1. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of , and a nonzero derivation; then:
- (i)
- (ii)
Proof. Every derivation is a multiplicative derivation. Therefore, from Theorems 1 and 2 we can prove that □
Theorem 3. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and a multiplicative derivation of ; then,
Proof. We can easily show that Hence, we need only prove that
Let
Per the hypothesis, we have
Replacing
ℓ in the last equation with
, we obtain
thus,
Using the hypothesis, we can see that
Taking
ℓ for
in the last equation and this equation, respectively, we find that
thus,
Replacing
r with
in (
4), we have
Because
is semiprime, it must contain a family
of prime ideals such that
If
P is a typical member of
from Fact (ii) we have
Assuming that
, we can use Equation (
3) to find that for all
we have
Using Equation (
3), we have
If we use the fact that
and that
P is the ideal of
we have
for all
, that is,
Either of these conditions implies that
for any
Thus, we can conclude that
The rest of the proof is the same as Theorem 1. □
Theorem 4. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and a multiplicative derivation of ; then,
Proof. Using the fact that and applying Theorem 3, we obtain □
Example 1. Let , where is a ring with a non-zero multiplicative derivation δ such that and is a noncommutative ring. Then, it is easy to verify that is not semiprime. For , we have ; however, , that is, .
Corollary 2. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of , and a nonzero derivation. Then:
- (i)
- (ii)
Corollary 3. Let be a prime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of , and a nonzero multiplicative derivation. Then:
- (i)
- (ii)
- (iii)
- (iv)
By removing the conditions
or
in ([
10], Theorem 1), the study is generalized to the semiprime ring. Moreover, the following theorem generalizes Theorem 2.
Theorem 5. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and two multiplicative derivations of Then,
Proof. We can easily show that
We want to prove that
Letting
, we can obtain that
Replacing
ℓ in this equation with
,
, we obtain
Using Equation (
5), it can be seen that
Taking
ℓ for
,
in the last equation, we have
Using Equation (
6), we can see that
Replacing
w in the above equation with
ℓ, we obtain
Because
is semiprime, it must contain a family
of prime ideals such that
If
P is a typical member of
℘ and
, then we have
from Fact (ii). Assuming that there exists
such that
,
Using Equation (
5), we have
Multiplying the left-hand side of the last equation by
, we can see that
Using
we arrive at
for all
, that is,
Either of these conditions implies that
which is a contradiction; thus,
for any
Therefore,
hence,
meaning that
and consequently that
Because
is semiprime ring, we can see that
for all
Then,
. From Lemma 1, we have
Using Equation (
5), we obtain
Again from Lemma 1, we have
Thus, we can conclude that
□
Example 2. Let , where and are rings. It is easy to verify that is not a semiprime ring with multiplicative derivations provided by and . For , we have ; however, , that is, .
Theorem 6. Let be a semiprime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and two multiplicative derivations of Then,
Proof. From Theorem 6, we have □
Example 3. Let , where and are rings. Then, it is easy to verify that is not a semiprime ring with multiplicative derivations provided by and . For , we have ; however, , that is, .
Corollary 4. Let be a prime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and two derivations of Then:
- (i)
- (ii)
The following theorems are not true for a semiprime ring. An example of this has already has been cleared. Thus, the last two theorems are proved for a prime ring.
Theorem 7. Let be a prime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of and a nonzero multiplicative derivation of Then,
Proof. It is clear to see that
; hence, we only need to show that
Let
Then, we have
Replacing
ℓ in the above equation with
, we obtain
Using Equation (
7), we can see that
Writing
ℓ for
we obtain
Using Equation (
8), we can see that
Replacing
with
in (
9), we obtain
Replacing
ℓ with
in (
10), we find that
Multiplying the left-hand side of (
10) by
we obtain
Subtracting (
11) from (
12), we arrive at
Because
is a prime ring, we obtain
Using Equation (
9), we have
thus,
that is,
Because
is prime ring, we have
or
Because
ℑ is a non-zero ideal of
, we obtain
or
Assuming that
using Equation (
7) we have
, that is,
for all
We can conclude that
From Lemma 1, we have
Using Equation (
9), we obtain
that is,
Because
is a prime ring, we have
or
Because
ℑ is a non-zero ideal of
, we have
or
Either of these conditions implies that
Using Equation (
7), we obtain
Replacing
ℓ by
,
we can see that
thus,
Taking
ℓ for
,
when using this equation, we obtain
Replacing
ℏ in the above equation with
ℓ, we have
Because
is a prime ring and
ℑ is a non-zero ideal of
, we can see that
or
We can now define the following two additive subgroups:
It is clear that Because a group cannot be a union of two of its subgroups, it must be the case that either or If then for all . Replacing ℓ in this equation with , , we arrive at , that is, for all . Because ℑ is a non-zero ideal of , we obtain , which is a contradiction; thus, and we can conclude that From Lemma 1, we have □
Corollary 5 ([
3], Theorem 2.5).
“Let be a prime ring and a nonzero derivation of Then, .” In semiprime ring, we cannot prove that , as the following example shows.
Example 4. Let be a semiprime ring and let be a multiplicative derivation, where is the derivation of . Then, it is easy to verify that but , that is, .
The following theorem generalizes Theorem 6.
Theorem 8. Let be a prime ring, ℑ a nonzero ideal of , and two multiplicative derivations of Then,
Proof. We can easily show that
Hence, we need only prove that
Let
We can find that
Replacing
ℓ in the above equation with
, we obtain
Using Equation (
13), we obtain
that is,
thus,
Replacing
by
,
in (
14), it can be seen that
Using Equation (
14), we have
Taking
ℏ for
ℓ in the last equation, we have
From Lemma 2, we have
thus,
Because
is prime ring and
ℑ is a non-zero ideal of
, we arrive at
Assuming that
using Equation (
14) we have
Replacing
in this equation with
, it can be seen that
Because
is prime ring, we have
or
Because
is non-zero, we have
Either of these conditions implies that
for all
that is.
thus,
Using Equation (
13), we have
Therefore, we obtain for all , proving that . From Lemma 1, we have □
Example 5. Let , where and are prime rings. Then, it is easy to verify that is a prime ring with multiplicative derivation provided by and . We can conclude that .
Corollary 6 ([
11], Theorem 2).
Let be a prime ring and let be two derivations of Then, In a semiprime ring, we cannot prove that , as the following example shows.
Example 6. Let , where is a commutative domain with nonzero derivation δ and is a noncommutative prime ring. Then, it is easy to verify that is semiprime with multiplicative derivation provided by and . For , we have ; however,, , that is, .
Open Problem: Our hypotheses are addressed to center-like sets on prime and semiprime rings. More general results can be provided when all hypotheses regarding semiprime rings are taken into account. In this study, the new center-like set was produced using commutativity conditions. In future studies, the results can be generalized based on the change conditions in the literature by taking new center-like sets as derivations, generalized derivations, semi-derivations, and homoderivations in semiprime and prime rings and by taking the center-like sets provided here as Lie ideals instead of ideals. Center-like sets can be defined as well. In addition, in previous studies the relations of center-like sets with each other have been examined under the conditions of the derivatives and new structures we have provided above. In addition to these studies, if articles [
13,
14,
15] on rings and semi-rings are taken into consideration, center-like sets can be studied in these rings as well.