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Annihilator (ring theory)

In mathematics, the annihilator of a subset S of a module over a ring is the ideal formed by the elements of the ring that give always zero when multiplied by each element of S.

Over an integral domain, a module that has a nonzero annihilator is a torsion module, and a finitely generated torsion module has a nonzero annihilator.

The above definition applies also in the case noncommutative rings, where the left annihilator of a left module is a left ideal, and the right-annihilator, of a right module is a right ideal.

Definitions edit

Let R be a ring, and let M be a left R-module. Choose a non-empty subset S of M. The annihilator of S, denoted AnnR(S), is the set of all elements r in R such that, for all s in S, rs = 0.[1] In set notation,

  for all  

It is the set of all elements of R that "annihilate" S (the elements for which S is a torsion set). Subsets of right modules may be used as well, after the modification of "sr = 0" in the definition.

The annihilator of a single element x is usually written AnnR(x) instead of AnnR({x}). If the ring R can be understood from the context, the subscript R can be omitted.

Since R is a module over itself, S may be taken to be a subset of R itself, and since R is both a right and a left R module, the notation must be modified slightly to indicate the left or right side. Usually   and   or some similar subscript scheme are used to distinguish the left and right annihilators, if necessary.

If M is an R-module and AnnR(M) = 0, then M is called a faithful module.

Properties edit

If S is a subset of a left R module M, then Ann(S) is a left ideal of R.[2]

If S is a submodule of M, then AnnR(S) is even a two-sided ideal: (ac)s = a(cs) = 0, since cs is another element of S.[3]

If S is a subset of M and N is the submodule of M generated by S, then in general AnnR(N) is a subset of AnnR(S), but they are not necessarily equal. If R is commutative, then the equality holds.

M may be also viewed as an R/AnnR(M)-module using the action  . Incidentally, it is not always possible to make an R module into an R/I module this way, but if the ideal I is a subset of the annihilator of M, then this action is well-defined. Considered as an R/AnnR(M)-module, M is automatically a faithful module.

For commutative rings edit

Throughout this section, let   be a commutative ring and   a finitely generated (for short, finite)  -module.

Relation to support edit

Recall that the support of a module is defined as

 

Then, when the module is finitely generated, there is the relation

 ,

where   is the set of prime ideals containing the subset.[4]

Short exact sequences edit

Given a short exact sequence of modules,

 

the support property

 [5]

together with the relation with the annihilator implies

 

More specifically, we have the relations

 

If the sequence splits then the inequality on the left is always an equality. In fact this holds for arbitrary direct sums of modules, as

 

Quotient modules and annihilators edit

Given an ideal   and let   be a finite module, then there is the relation

 

on the support. Using the relation to support, this gives the relation with the annihilator[6]

 

Examples edit

Over the integers edit

Over   any finitely generated module is completely classified as the direct sum of its free part with its torsion part from the fundamental theorem of abelian groups. Then, the annihilator of a finite module is non-trivial only if it is entirely torsion. This is because

 

since the only element killing each of the   is  . For example, the annihilator of   is

 

the ideal generated by  . In fact the annihilator of a torsion module

 

is isomorphic to the ideal generated by their least common multiple,  . This shows the annihilators can be easily be classified over the integers.

Over a commutative ring R edit

In fact, there is a similar computation that can be done for any finite module over a commutative ring  . Recall that the definition of finiteness of   implies there exists a right-exact sequence, called a presentation, given by

 

where   is in  . Writing   explicitly as a matrix gives it as

 

hence   has the direct sum decomposition

 

If we write each of these ideals as

 

then the ideal   given by

 

presents the annihilator.

Over k[x,y] edit

Over the commutative ring   for a field  , the annihilator of the module

 

is given by the ideal

 

Chain conditions on annihilator ideals edit

The lattice of ideals of the form   where S is a subset of R comprise a complete lattice when partially ordered by inclusion. It is interesting to study rings for which this lattice (or its right counterpart) satisfy the ascending chain condition or descending chain condition.

Denote the lattice of left annihilator ideals of R as   and the lattice of right annihilator ideals of R as  . It is known that   satisfies the A.C.C. if and only if   satisfies the D.C.C., and symmetrically   satisfies the A.C.C. if and only if   satisfies the D.C.C. If either lattice has either of these chain conditions, then R has no infinite orthogonal sets of idempotents. [7][8]

If R is a ring for which   satisfies the A.C.C. and RR has finite uniform dimension, then R is called a left Goldie ring.[8]

Category-theoretic description for commutative rings edit

When R is commutative and M is an R-module, we may describe AnnR(M) as the kernel of the action map R → EndR(M) determined by the adjunct map of the identity MM along the Hom-tensor adjunction.

More generally, given a bilinear map of modules  , the annihilator of a subset   is the set of all elements in   that annihilate  :

 

Conversely, given  , one can define an annihilator as a subset of  .

The annihilator gives a Galois connection between subsets of   and  , and the associated closure operator is stronger than the span. In particular:

  • annihilators are submodules
  •  
  •  

An important special case is in the presence of a nondegenerate form on a vector space, particularly an inner product: then the annihilator associated to the map   is called the orthogonal complement.

Relations to other properties of rings edit

Given a module M over a Noetherian commutative ring R, a prime ideal of R that is an annihilator of a nonzero element of M is called an associated prime of M.

 
(Here we allow zero to be a zero divisor.)
In particular DR is the set of (left) zero divisors of R taking S = R and R acting on itself as a left R-module.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pierce (1982), p. 23.
  2. ^ Proof: If a and b both annihilate S, then for each s in S, (a + b)s = as + bs = 0, and for any r in R, (ra)s = r(as) = r0 = 0.
  3. ^ Pierce (1982), p. 23, Lemma b, item (i).
  4. ^ "Lemma 10.39.5 (00L2)—The Stacks project". stacks.math.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
  5. ^ "Lemma 10.39.9 (00L3)—The Stacks project". stacks.math.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
  6. ^ "Lemma 10.39.9 (00L3)—The Stacks project". stacks.math.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
  7. ^ Anderson & Fuller 1992, p. 322.
  8. ^ a b Lam 1999.

References edit

annihilator, ring, theory, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, artic. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Annihilator ring theory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page June 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In mathematics the annihilator of a subset S of a module over a ring is the ideal formed by the elements of the ring that give always zero when multiplied by each element of S Over an integral domain a module that has a nonzero annihilator is a torsion module and a finitely generated torsion module has a nonzero annihilator The above definition applies also in the case noncommutative rings where the left annihilator of a left module is a left ideal and the right annihilator of a right module is a right ideal Contents 1 Definitions 2 Properties 2 1 For commutative rings 2 1 1 Relation to support 2 1 2 Short exact sequences 2 1 3 Quotient modules and annihilators 3 Examples 3 1 Over the integers 3 2 Over a commutative ring R 3 3 Over k x y 4 Chain conditions on annihilator ideals 5 Category theoretic description for commutative rings 6 Relations to other properties of rings 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesDefinitions editLet R be a ring and let M be a left R module Choose a non empty subset S of M The annihilator of S denoted AnnR S is the set of all elements r in R such that for all s in S rs 0 1 In set notation A n n R S r R r s 0 displaystyle mathrm Ann R S r in R mid rs 0 nbsp for all s S displaystyle s in S nbsp It is the set of all elements of R that annihilate S the elements for which S is a torsion set Subsets of right modules may be used as well after the modification of sr 0 in the definition The annihilator of a single element x is usually written AnnR x instead of AnnR x If the ring R can be understood from the context the subscript R can be omitted Since R is a module over itself S may be taken to be a subset of R itself and since R is both a right and a left R module the notation must be modified slightly to indicate the left or right side Usually ℓ A n n R S displaystyle ell mathrm Ann R S nbsp and r A n n R S displaystyle r mathrm Ann R S nbsp or some similar subscript scheme are used to distinguish the left and right annihilators if necessary If M is an R module and AnnR M 0 then M is called a faithful module Properties editIf S is a subset of a left R module M then Ann S is a left ideal of R 2 If S is a submodule of M then AnnR S is even a two sided ideal ac s a cs 0 since cs is another element of S 3 If S is a subset of M and N is the submodule of M generated by S then in general AnnR N is a subset of AnnR S but they are not necessarily equal If R is commutative then the equality holds M may be also viewed as an R AnnR M module using the action r m r m displaystyle overline r m rm nbsp Incidentally it is not always possible to make an R module into an R I module this way but if the ideal I is a subset of the annihilator of M then this action is well defined Considered as an R AnnR M module M is automatically a faithful module For commutative rings edit Throughout this section let R displaystyle R nbsp be a commutative ring and M displaystyle M nbsp a finitely generated for short finite R displaystyle R nbsp module Relation to support edit Recall that the support of a module is defined as Supp M p Spec R M p 0 displaystyle operatorname Supp M mathfrak p in operatorname Spec R mid M mathfrak p neq 0 nbsp Then when the module is finitely generated there is the relation V Ann R M Supp M displaystyle V operatorname Ann R M operatorname Supp M nbsp where V displaystyle V cdot nbsp is the set of prime ideals containing the subset 4 Short exact sequences edit Given a short exact sequence of modules 0 M M M 0 displaystyle 0 to M to M to M to 0 nbsp the support property Supp M Supp M Supp M displaystyle operatorname Supp M operatorname Supp M cup operatorname Supp M nbsp 5 together with the relation with the annihilator implies V Ann R M V Ann R M V Ann R M displaystyle V operatorname Ann R M V operatorname Ann R M cup V operatorname Ann R M nbsp More specifically we have the relations Ann R M Ann R M Ann R M Ann R M Ann R M displaystyle operatorname Ann R M cap operatorname Ann R M supseteq operatorname Ann R M supseteq operatorname Ann R M operatorname Ann R M nbsp If the sequence splits then the inequality on the left is always an equality In fact this holds for arbitrary direct sums of modules as Ann R i I M i i I Ann R M i displaystyle operatorname Ann R left bigoplus i in I M i right bigcap i in I operatorname Ann R M i nbsp Quotient modules and annihilators edit Given an ideal I R displaystyle I subseteq R nbsp and let M displaystyle M nbsp be a finite module then there is the relation Supp M I M Supp M V I displaystyle text Supp M IM operatorname Supp M cap V I nbsp on the support Using the relation to support this gives the relation with the annihilator 6 V Ann R M I M V Ann R M V I displaystyle V text Ann R M IM V text Ann R M cap V I nbsp Examples editOver the integers edit Over Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp any finitely generated module is completely classified as the direct sum of its free part with its torsion part from the fundamental theorem of abelian groups Then the annihilator of a finite module is non trivial only if it is entirely torsion This is because Ann Z Z k 0 0 displaystyle text Ann mathbb Z mathbb Z oplus k 0 0 nbsp since the only element killing each of the Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp is 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp For example the annihilator of Z 2 Z 3 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 oplus mathbb Z 3 nbsp is Ann Z Z 2 Z 3 6 lcm 2 3 displaystyle text Ann mathbb Z mathbb Z 2 oplus mathbb Z 3 6 text lcm 2 3 nbsp the ideal generated by 6 displaystyle 6 nbsp In fact the annihilator of a torsion module M i 1 n Z a i k i displaystyle M cong bigoplus i 1 n mathbb Z a i oplus k i nbsp is isomorphic to the ideal generated by their least common multiple lcm a 1 a n displaystyle operatorname lcm a 1 ldots a n nbsp This shows the annihilators can be easily be classified over the integers Over a commutative ring R edit In fact there is a similar computation that can be done for any finite module over a commutative ring R displaystyle R nbsp Recall that the definition of finiteness of M displaystyle M nbsp implies there exists a right exact sequence called a presentation given by R l ϕ R k M 0 displaystyle R oplus l xrightarrow phi R oplus k to M to 0 nbsp where ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is in Mat k l R displaystyle text Mat k l R nbsp Writing ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp explicitly as a matrix gives it as ϕ ϕ 1 1 ϕ 1 n ϕ n 1 ϕ n n displaystyle phi begin bmatrix phi 1 1 amp cdots amp phi 1 n vdots amp amp vdots phi n 1 amp cdots amp phi n n end bmatrix nbsp hence M displaystyle M nbsp has the direct sum decomposition M i 1 k R ϕ i 1 1 ϕ i n 1 displaystyle M bigoplus i 1 k frac R phi i 1 1 ldots phi i n 1 nbsp If we write each of these ideals as I i ϕ i 1 1 ϕ i n 1 displaystyle I i phi i 1 1 ldots phi i n 1 nbsp then the ideal I displaystyle I nbsp given by V I i 1 n V I i displaystyle V I bigcup i 1 n V I i nbsp presents the annihilator Over k x y edit Over the commutative ring k x y displaystyle k x y nbsp for a field k displaystyle k nbsp the annihilator of the module M k x y x 2 y k x y y 3 displaystyle M frac k x y x 2 y oplus frac k x y y 3 nbsp is given by the ideal Ann k x y M x 2 y y 3 displaystyle text Ann k x y M x 2 y y 3 nbsp Chain conditions on annihilator ideals editThe lattice of ideals of the form ℓ A n n R S displaystyle ell mathrm Ann R S nbsp where S is a subset of R comprise a complete lattice when partially ordered by inclusion It is interesting to study rings for which this lattice or its right counterpart satisfy the ascending chain condition or descending chain condition Denote the lattice of left annihilator ideals of R as L A displaystyle mathcal LA nbsp and the lattice of right annihilator ideals of R as R A displaystyle mathcal RA nbsp It is known that L A displaystyle mathcal LA nbsp satisfies the A C C if and only if R A displaystyle mathcal RA nbsp satisfies the D C C and symmetrically R A displaystyle mathcal RA nbsp satisfies the A C C if and only if L A displaystyle mathcal LA nbsp satisfies the D C C If either lattice has either of these chain conditions then R has no infinite orthogonal sets of idempotents 7 8 If R is a ring for which L A displaystyle mathcal LA nbsp satisfies the A C C and RR has finite uniform dimension then R is called a left Goldie ring 8 Category theoretic description for commutative rings editWhen R is commutative and M is an R module we may describe AnnR M as the kernel of the action map R EndR M determined by the adjunct map of the identity M M along the Hom tensor adjunction More generally given a bilinear map of modules F M N P displaystyle F colon M times N to P nbsp the annihilator of a subset S M displaystyle S subseteq M nbsp is the set of all elements in N displaystyle N nbsp that annihilate S displaystyle S nbsp Ann S n N s S F s n 0 displaystyle operatorname Ann S n in N mid forall s in S F s n 0 nbsp Conversely given T N displaystyle T subseteq N nbsp one can define an annihilator as a subset of M displaystyle M nbsp The annihilator gives a Galois connection between subsets of M displaystyle M nbsp and N displaystyle N nbsp and the associated closure operator is stronger than the span In particular annihilators are submodules Span S Ann Ann S displaystyle operatorname Span S leq operatorname Ann operatorname Ann S nbsp Ann Ann Ann S Ann S displaystyle operatorname Ann operatorname Ann operatorname Ann S operatorname Ann S nbsp An important special case is in the presence of a nondegenerate form on a vector space particularly an inner product then the annihilator associated to the map V V K displaystyle V times V to K nbsp is called the orthogonal complement Relations to other properties of rings editGiven a module M over a Noetherian commutative ring R a prime ideal of R that is an annihilator of a nonzero element of M is called an associated prime of M Annihilators are used to define left Rickart rings and Baer rings The set of left zero divisors DS of S can be written asD S x S 0 A n n R x displaystyle D S bigcup x in S setminus 0 mathrm Ann R x nbsp dd Here we allow zero to be a zero divisor In particular DR is the set of left zero divisors of R taking S R and R acting on itself as a left R module When R is commutative and Noetherian the set D R displaystyle D R nbsp is precisely equal to the union of the associated primes of the R module R See also editSocle Support of a module Faltings annihilator theoremNotes edit Pierce 1982 p 23 Proof If a and b both annihilate S then for each s in S a b s as bs 0 and for any r in R ra s r as r0 0 Pierce 1982 p 23 Lemma b item i Lemma 10 39 5 00L2 The Stacks project stacks math columbia edu Retrieved 2020 05 13 Lemma 10 39 9 00L3 The Stacks project stacks math columbia edu Retrieved 2020 05 13 Lemma 10 39 9 00L3 The Stacks project stacks math columbia edu Retrieved 2020 05 13 Anderson amp Fuller 1992 p 322 a b Lam 1999 References editAnderson Frank W Fuller Kent R 1992 Rings and categories of modules Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 13 2 ed New York Springer Verlag pp x 376 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 4418 9 ISBN 0 387 97845 3 MR 1245487 Israel Nathan Herstein 1968 Noncommutative Rings Carus Mathematical Monographs 15 Mathematical Association of America page 3 Lam Tsit Yuen 1999 Lectures on modules and rings Graduate Texts in Mathematics No 189 vol 189 Berlin New York Springer Verlag pp 228 232 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0525 8 ISBN 978 0 387 98428 5 MR 1653294 Richard S Pierce Associative algebras Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 88 Springer Verlag 1982 ISBN 978 0 387 90693 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Annihilator ring theory amp oldid 1188897019 Definitions, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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