The aim of this essay is to prove the Cayley–Hamilton theorem naturally.
Definition. Let be the matrix ring over R and be the polynomial ring over
For , we have the following decomposition:
Let
But the evaluation map at A is not a ring homomorphism in since this is a non-commutative ring.
For example, the identity
is true in , but what if you evaluate this identity at B such that ?
Another example is, Let be a polynomial ring and is not commutative. Consider , by definition, . But in general. However, if , the evaluation map will be a ring homomorphism. Let us prove it.
Proposition. Let be a polynomial ring and is not commutative. Let , denote the evaluation map at by . Then is a ring homomorphism.
Proof. Let . Then .
Now consider and .
We have , and since . Hence
Now, we want to find a proper ring such that is a ring homomorphism and prove Cayley–Hamilton theorem directly.
The proper choice is . Since in the centre of by definition.