Quotient ring
In ring theory, a branch of abstract algebra, a quotient ring, also known as factor ring, difference ring or residue class ring, is a construction quite similar to the factor groups of group theory and the quotient spaces of linear algebra. One starts with a ring R and a two-sided ideal I in R, and constructs a new ring, the quotient ring R/I, whose elements are the cosets of I in R subject to special + and ⋅ operations.
Quotient rings are distinct from the so-called 'quotient field', or field of fractions, of an integral domain as well as from the more general 'rings of quotients' obtained by localization.
Formal quotient ring construction
Given a ring R and a two-sided ideal I in R, we may define an equivalence relation ~ on R as follows:
Using the ideal properties, it is not difficult to check that ~ is a congruence relation.
In case a ~ b, we say that a and b are congruent modulo I.
The equivalence class of the element a in R is given by
This equivalence class is also sometimes written as a mod I and called the "residue class of a modulo I".