What the study found
The paper gives an example of a ring with a pair of strongly clean elements that are one-sided inverses of each other, but not two-sided inverses. This suggests that the answer to a longstanding open question about whether every strongly clean ring is Dedekind-finite may be negative.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors present the example as relevant because it bears on the open question of whether every strongly clean ring must be Dedekind-finite. They also say they discuss possible ways to strengthen the result into a full negative answer.
What the researchers tested
The article studies strongly clean rings, a class of rings in which definitions are recalled in the paper, and the property of being Dedekind-finite, meaning that one-sided inverses would have to be two-sided inverses. The author constructs an example and then briefly considers related topics, including uniquely strongly clean rings.
What worked and what didn't
What worked was finding a ring with strongly clean elements that are one-sided inverses but not two-sided inverses of one another. What did not work, in the sense of the open problem, is that the paper does not fully settle whether every strongly clean ring is Dedekind-finite; it only suggests that a negative answer may be possible.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not claim a complete resolution of the open question. It also notes only brief observations on related topics, so detailed limitations or broader scope constraints are not described in the available summary.
Key points
- The paper gives an example of strongly clean elements that are one-sided inverses but not two-sided inverses.
- The example bears on the open question of whether every strongly clean ring is Dedekind-finite.
- The authors say the result suggests the answer to that question may be negative.
- The paper also mentions possible ways to strengthen the result and briefly notes uniquely strongly clean rings.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Example shows strongly clean one-sided inverses can fail to be two-sided
- Image credit:
- Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels
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