Nilradical
Let be a commutative ring. The set of all nilpotent elements of
(i.e., the set of all
for which
for some natural
) is called the nilradical of
. It is sometimes denoted
.
The nilradical is an ideal, for if , then for any
,
; and if
, then
Proposition. The nilradical of
is the intersection of all prime ideals of
.
Proof. Let be a prime ideal of
, and let
be a nilpotent element of
. We claim that
. Indeed, let
be the least positive integer for which
. (Such an integer exists, since
is nilpotent.) Suppose that
. Then
; since
is a prime ideal, then
or
, a contradiction. This proves that
To show the converse, it suffices to show that for any non-nilpotent element
, there is some prime ideal that does not contain
.
So suppose that is an element of
that is not nilpotent. Let
be the set of ideals of
that do not contain any element of the form
. Since
,
is not empty; then by Zorn's Lemma,
has a maximal element
.
It suffices to show that is a prime ideal. Indeed, suppose otherwise; then there exist elements
for which
. Then the set of elements
for which
is evidently an ideal of
that properly contains
; it therefore contains
, for some integer
. By similar reasoning, the set of elements
for which
is an ideal that properly contains
, so this set contains
, for some integer
. Then
, a contradiction.
Therefore is a prime ideal that does not contain
. It follows from the generality of this argument that
as desired.