The covering numbers of rings
Eric Swartz, Nicholas J. Werner

TL;DR
This paper classifies rings based on their minimal covers by subrings, introduces the concepts of $\sigma$-elementary and $\sigma_u$-elementary rings, and determines the possible covering numbers, revealing most integers are not covering numbers.
Contribution
It provides a complete classification of $\sigma$-elementary unital rings and establishes the equality of their covering numbers, also linking non-unital rings to unital rings with the same covering number.
Findings
Classified all $\sigma$-elementary unital rings.
Proved $\sigma_u(R) = \sigma(R)$ for $\sigma_u$-elementary rings.
Showed the distribution of possible covering numbers grows as $N/ ext{log}(N)$.
Abstract
A cover of an associative (not necessarily commutative nor unital) ring is a collection of proper subrings of whose set-theoretic union equals . If such a cover exists, then the covering number of is the cardinality of a minimal cover, and a ring is called -elementary if for every nonzero two-sided ideal of . If is a ring with unity, then we define the unital covering number to be the size of a minimal cover of by subrings that contain (if such a cover exists), and is -elementary if for every nonzero two-sided ideal of . In this paper, we classify all -elementary unital rings and determine their covering numbers. Building on this classification, we are further able to classify all -elementary rings and prove $\sigma_u(R) =…
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