Covering numbers of commutative rings (2008.13218v1)
Abstract: A cover of a unital, associative (not necessarily commutative) ring $R$ is a collection of proper subrings of $R$ whose set-theoretic union equals $R$. If such a cover exists, then the covering number $\sigma(R)$ of $R$ is the cardinality of a minimal cover, and a ring $R$ is called $\sigma$-elementary if $\sigma(R) < \sigma(R/I)$ for every nonzero two-sided ideal $I$ of $R$. In this paper, we show that if $R$ has a finite covering number, then the calculation of $\sigma(R)$ can be reduced to the case where $R$ is a finite ring of characteristic $p$ and the Jacobson radical $J$ of $R$ has nilpotency 2. Our main result is that if $R$ has a finite covering number and $R/J$ is commutative (even if $R$ itself is not), then either $\sigma(R)=\sigma(R/J)$, or $\sigma(R)=pd+1$ for some $d \geqslant 1$. As a byproduct, we classify all commutative $\sigma$-elementary rings with a finite covering number and characterize the integers that occur as the covering number of a commutative ring.