Help with proof that $\mathbb Z[i]/\langle 1 - i \rangle$ is a field.

Your proof only shows that there are at most two elements. So you also have to check that these two elements differ, i.e. that $1-i$ is not a unit. But instead, you can also do it directly, without any elements at all:

$\mathbb{Z}[i]/(i-1)=\mathbb{Z}[x]/(x^2+1)/(x-1)=\mathbb{Z}/(1^2+1)=\mathbb{F}_2$.


Your answer is great, but I'd like to give a different view as well.

A standard first or second example of a Euclidean Domain is the Gaussian integers $\mathbb{Z}[i]$, so that in particular the Gaussian integers form a principal ideal domain. We also know that in PIDs, nonzero prime ideals are maximal. So if we were to show that $1 - i$ is a Gaussian prime, then $\langle 1 - i \rangle$ would be a prime ideal, and thus a maximal ideal. Thus, quotienting by it would give a field.

So how do we show that $1 - i$ is prime? Well, compute its norm (from the Euclidean Domain norm, where $|x + iy| = x^2 + y^2$. Its norm is $2$. Norms are multiplicative, so if $1-i = ab$, then $2 = |a||b|$. But its norm is also an integer, and $2$ is a prime (in the reals). Thus $1-i$ is a prime.

And so we have it.


One must also prove that the quotient ring is $\ne \{0\}.\:$ Below is a complete proof. $\rm\quad \Bbb Z\stackrel{h}{\to}\, \Bbb Z[{\it i}\,]/(1\!-\!{\it i}\,)\:$ is $\rm\,\color{#0b0}{\bf onto,\:}$ by $\rm\:mod\,\ 1\!-\!{\it i}\,:\ {\it i}\,\equiv 1\phantom{\dfrac{|}{|}}\!\!\!\Rightarrow\:a\!+\!b\,{\it i}\,\equiv a\!+\!b\in \Bbb Z\ $
$\rm\quad n\in ker\ h\iff 1\!-\!{\it i}\,\mid n\iff\phantom{\dfrac{|}{|_|}}\!\!\!\!\!\!\! \dfrac{n}{1\!-\!{\it i}}\, =\, \dfrac{n\,(1\!+\!{\it i}\,)}2\,\in\, \Bbb Z[{\it i}\,] \iff \color{#c00}2\mid n\ $
$\rm\quad So \ \ \ \Bbb Z[{\it i}\,]/(1\!-\!{\it i}\,)\, \color{#0b0}{\bf =\ Im\:h}\,\cong\, \Bbb Z/ker\:h \,=\, \Bbb Z/\color{#c00}2\,\Bbb Z\, =\, \Bbb F_2\ $ $\ \ $ QED