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1992 | Buch

Rings and Categories of Modules

verfasst von: Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller

Verlag: Springer New York

Buchreihe : Graduate Texts in Mathematics

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This book is intended to provide a reasonably self-contained account of a major portion of the general theory of rings and modules suitable as a text for introductory and more advanced graduate courses. We assume the famil­ iarity with rings usually acquired in standard undergraduate algebra courses. Our general approach is categorical rather than arithmetical. The continuing theme of the text is the study of the relationship between the one-sided ideal structure that a ring may possess and the behavior of its categories of modules. Following a brief outline of set-theoretic and categorical foundations, the text begins with the basic definitions and properties of rings, modules and homomorphisms and ranges through comprehensive treatments of direct sums, finiteness conditions, the Wedderburn-Artin Theorem, the Jacobson radical, the hom and tensor functions, Morita equivalence and duality, de­ composition theory of injective and projective modules, and semi perfect and perfect rings. In this second edition we have included a chapter containing many of the classical results on artinian rings that have hdped to form the foundation for much of the contemporary research on the representation theory of artinian rings and finite dimensional algebras. Both to illustrate the text and to extend it we have included a substantial number of exercises covering a wide spectrum of difficulty. There are, of course" many important areas of ring and module theory that the text does not touch upon.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
§0. Preliminaries
Abstract
In this section is assembled a summary of various bits of notation, terminology, and background information. Of course, we reserve the right to use variations in our notation and terminology that we believe to be self-explanatory without the need of any further comment.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 1. Rings, Modules and Homomorphisms
Abstract
The subject of our study is ring theory. In this chapter we introduce the fundamental tools of this study. Section 1 reviews the basic facts about rings, subrings, ideals, and ring homomorphisms. It also introduces some of the notation and the examples that will be needed later.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 2. Direct Sums and Products
Abstract
For each ring R we have derived several module categories—among these the category R M of left R-modules. This derivation is not entirely reversible for, in general, R M does not characterize R. However, as we shall see in Chapter 6 it does come close. Thus, we can expect to uncover substantial information about R by mining R M. So in this chapter we start to probe more deeply into the structure of the modules themselves. In so far as possible we propose to do this in the context of the category R M for in this way at any subsequent stage we shall be able to apply the general machinery of category theory.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 3. Finiteness Conditions for Modules
Abstract
The first round of generalities is over, and it is now time for us to apply this formal machinery to the study of specific classes of rings and modules. We begin in this chapter with an investigation of the structure of classes of modules having certain natural finiteness properties. In the next chapter we return to the rings themselves.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 4. Classical Ring-Structure Theorems
Abstract
As we saw in the last chapter semisimple modules play a distinguished role in the theory of modules. Classically, the most important class of rings consists of those rings R whose category R M has a semisimple generator. A characteristic property of such a ring R, called a “semisimple” ring, is that each left R-module is semisimple. These rings are the objects of study in Section 13 where we prove the fundamental Wedderburn-Artin characterization of these rings as direct sums of matrix rings over division rings. In particular, a semisimple ring is a direct sum of rings each having a simple faithful left module. In Section 14 we study rings characterized by this latter property—the “(left) primitive” rings. Here we prove Jacobson’s important generalization of the semisimple case characterizing left primitive rings as “dense rings” of linear transformations.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 5. Functors Between Module Categories
Abstract
it should now be clear that the structure of the category R M determines to a significant extent the structure of the ring R. Thus in this chapter we turn to the direct studies of these categories R M. Our starting point will be the study of certain natural “functors” or “homomorphisms” between pairs of these categories.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 6. Equivalence and Duality for Module Categories
Abstract
So far our emphasis has been on studying rings in terms of the module categories they admit—that is, in terms of the representations of the rings as endomorphism rings of abelian groups. As we shall see the Wedderburn Theorem for simple artinian rings can be interpreted as asserting that a ring R is simple artinian if and only if the category R M is “the same” as the category D M for some division ring D. On the other hand, if D is a division ring, then the theory of duality from elementary linear algebra asserts that the categories D FM and FM D of finitely generated left D-vector spaces and right D-vector spaces are “duals” of one another.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 7. Injective Modules, Projective Modules, and Their Decompositions
Abstract
In this chapter we return to the study of decompositions of modules—specifically of injective and projective modules. First we examine characterizations of noetherian rings in terms of the structure of injective modules. Then, after considering the decomposition theory of direct sums of countably generated modules, we proceed to the study of semiperfect and perfect rings (those over which all finitely generated modules and, respectively, all modules have projective covers). In the final section we show that the structure of the endomorphism ring of a finitely generated module determines whether direct sums of copies of that module have decompositions that complement direct summands.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Chapter 8. Classical Artinian Rings
Abstract
In our concluding chapter we present basic results on several types of artinian rings that have come to be regarded as classical due to their natural origins and the influence they have had on the literature of ring and module theory. These include artinian rings with duality, quasi-Frobenius (or QF) rings, QF-3 rings, and serial rings.
Frank W. Anderson, Kent R. Fuller
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Rings and Categories of Modules
verfasst von
Frank W. Anderson
Kent R. Fuller
Copyright-Jahr
1992
Verlag
Springer New York
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4612-4418-9
Print ISBN
978-1-4612-8763-6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-4418-9