The ring of integers in the canonical structures of the plane
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5269/bspm.68467Abstract
The canonical structures of the plane are those that result, up to isomorphism, from the rings that have the form $\mathds{R}[x]/(ax^2+bx+c)$ with $a\neq 0$. That ring is isomorphic to $\mathds{R}[\theta]$, where $\theta$ is the equivalence class of x, which satisfies $\theta^2 = \left( -\dfrac{c}{a} \right) + \theta \left(-\dfrac{b}{a}\right)$. On the other hand, it is known that, up to isomorphism, there are only three canonical structures: the one corresponding to $\theta^2 = -1$ (the complex numbers), $\theta^2 = 1$ (the perplex or hyperbolic numbers) and $\theta^2 = 0$ (the parabolic numbers). This article deals with the algebraic structure of the rings of integers $\mathds{Z}[\theta]$ in the perplex and parabolic cases by analogy to the complex cases: the ring of Gaussian integers. For those rings, a division algorithm is proved, and as a consequence, the characterization of the prime and irreducible elements is obtained.
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