In algebra, the real radical of an ideal ''I'' in a polynomial ring with realcoefficients is the largest ideal containing ''I'' with the same (real) vanishing locus.
It plays a similar role in real algebraic geometry that the radical of an ideal plays in algebraic geometry over an algebraically closed field.
More specifically, Hilbert's Nullstellensatz says that when ''I'' is an ideal in a polynomial ring with coefficients coming from an algebraically closed field, the radical of ''I'' is the set of polynomials vanishing on the vanishing locus of ''I''. In real algebraic geometry, the Nullstellensatz fails as the real numbers are not algebraically closed. However, one can recover a similar theorem, the ''real Nullstellensatz'', by using the real radical in place of the (ordinary) radical.
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