Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4588703 Journal of Algebra 2007 25 Pages PDF
Abstract

An element of a ring is called strongly clean if it can be written as the sum of a unit and an idempotent that commute. A ring is called strongly clean if each of its elements is strongly clean. In this paper, we investigate conditions on a local ring R that imply that Tn(R) is a strongly clean ring. It is shown that this is the case for commutative local rings R, as well as for a host of other classes of local rings. An example of a local ring A for which T2(A) is not strongly clean is also given.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Algebra and Number Theory