• Any field, including the fields of
rational numbers,
real numbers, and
complex numbers, is Noetherian. (A field only has two ideals — itself and (0).) • Any
principal ideal ring, such as the integers, is Noetherian since every ideal is generated by a single element. This includes
principal ideal domains and
Euclidean domains. • A
Dedekind domain (e.g.,
rings of integers) is a Noetherian domain in which every ideal is generated by at most two elements. • The
coordinate ring of an
affine variety is a Noetherian ring, as a consequence of the Hilbert basis theorem. • The enveloping algebra
U of a finite-dimensional
Lie algebra \mathfrak{g} is a both left and right Noetherian ring; this follows from the fact that the
associated graded ring of
U is a quotient of \operatorname{Sym}(\mathfrak{g}), which is a polynomial ring over a field (the
PBW theorem); thus, Noetherian. For the same reason, the
Weyl algebra, and more general rings of
differential operators, are Noetherian. • The ring of polynomials in finitely-many variables over the integers or a field is Noetherian. Rings that are not Noetherian tend to be (in some sense) very large. Here are some examples of non-Noetherian rings: • The ring of polynomials in infinitely-many variables,
X1,
X2,
X3, etc. The sequence of ideals (
X1), (
X1,
X2), (
X1,
X2,
X3), etc. is ascending, and does not terminate. • The ring of all
algebraic integers is not Noetherian. For example, it contains the infinite ascending chain of principal ideals: (2), (21/2), (21/4), (21/8), ... • The ring of
continuous functions from the real numbers to the real numbers is not Noetherian: Let
In be the ideal of all continuous functions
f such that
f(
x) = 0 for all
x ≥
n. The sequence of ideals
I0,
I1,
I2, etc., is an ascending chain that does not terminate. • The ring of
stable homotopy groups of spheres is not Noetherian. However, a non-Noetherian ring can be a subring of a Noetherian ring. Since any
integral domain is a subring of a field, any integral domain that is not Noetherian provides an example. To give a less trivial example, • The ring of
rational functions generated by
x and
y/
xn over a field
k is a subring of the field
k(
x,
y) in only two variables. Indeed, there are rings that are right Noetherian, but not left Noetherian, so that one must be careful in measuring the "size" of a ring this way. For example, if
L is a
subgroup of
Q2
isomorphic to
Z, let
R be the ring of homomorphisms
f from
Q2 to itself satisfying
f(
L) ⊂
L. Choosing a basis, we can describe the same ring
R as :R=\left\{\left.\begin{bmatrix}a & \beta \\0 & \gamma \end{bmatrix} \, \right\vert\, a\in \mathbf{Z}, \beta\in \mathbf{Q},\gamma\in \mathbf{Q}\right\}. This ring is right Noetherian, but not left Noetherian; the subset
I ⊂
R consisting of elements with
a = 0 and
γ = 0 is a left ideal that is not finitely generated as a left
R-module. If
R is a commutative subring of a left Noetherian ring
S, and
S is finitely generated as a left
R-module, then
R is Noetherian. (In the special case when
S is commutative, this is known as
Eakin's theorem.) However, this is not true if
R is not commutative: the ring
R of the previous paragraph is a subring of the left Noetherian ring
S = Hom(
Q2,
Q2), and
S is finitely generated as a left
R-module, but
R is not left Noetherian. A
unique factorization domain is not necessarily a Noetherian ring. It does satisfy a weaker condition: the
ascending chain condition on principal ideals. A ring of polynomials in infinitely-many variables is an example of a non-Noetherian unique factorization domain. A
valuation ring is not Noetherian unless it is a principal ideal domain. It gives an example of a ring that arises naturally in
algebraic geometry but is not Noetherian.
Noetherian group rings Consider the
group ring R[G] of a
group G over a
ring R. It is a
ring, and an
associative algebra over R if R is
commutative. For a group G and a commutative ring R, the following two conditions are equivalent. • The ring R[G] is left-Noetherian. • The ring R[G] is right-Noetherian. This is because there is a
bijection between the left and right ideals of the group ring in this case, via the R-
associative algebra homomorphism :R[G]\to R[G]^{\operatorname{op}}, :g\mapsto g^{-1}\qquad(\forall g\in G). Let G be a group and R a ring. If R[G] is left/right/two-sided Noetherian, then R is left/right/two-sided Noetherian and G is a
Noetherian group. Conversely, if R is a Noetherian commutative ring and G is an
extension of a
Noetherian solvable group (i.e. a
polycyclic group) by a
finite group, then R[G] is two-sided Noetherian. On the other hand, however, there is a
Noetherian group G whose group ring over any Noetherian commutative ring is not two-sided Noetherian. == Key theorems ==