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Module homomorphism

In algebra, a module homomorphism is a function between modules that preserves the module structures. Explicitly, if M and N are left modules over a ring R, then a function is called an R-module homomorphism or an R-linear map if for any x, y in M and r in R,

In other words, f is a group homomorphism (for the underlying additive groups) that commutes with scalar multiplication. If M, N are right R-modules, then the second condition is replaced with

The preimage of the zero element under f is called the kernel of f. The set of all module homomorphisms from M to N is denoted by . It is an abelian group (under pointwise addition) but is not necessarily a module unless R is commutative.

The composition of module homomorphisms is again a module homomorphism, and the identity map on a module is a module homomorphism. Thus, all the (say left) modules together with all the module homomorphisms between them form the category of modules.

Terminology edit

A module homomorphism is called a module isomorphism if it admits an inverse homomorphism; in particular, it is a bijection. Conversely, one can show a bijective module homomorphism is an isomorphism; i.e., the inverse is a module homomorphism. In particular, a module homomorphism is an isomorphism if and only if it is an isomorphism between the underlying abelian groups.

The isomorphism theorems hold for module homomorphisms.

A module homomorphism from a module M to itself is called an endomorphism and an isomorphism from M to itself an automorphism. One writes   for the set of all endomorphisms of a module M. It is not only an abelian group but is also a ring with multiplication given by function composition, called the endomorphism ring of M. The group of units of this ring is the automorphism group of M.

Schur's lemma says that a homomorphism between simple modules (modules with no non-trivial submodules) must be either zero or an isomorphism. In particular, the endomorphism ring of a simple module is a division ring.

In the language of the category theory, an injective homomorphism is also called a monomorphism and a surjective homomorphism an epimorphism.

Examples edit

  • The zero map MN that maps every element to zero.
  • A linear transformation between vector spaces.
  •  .
  • For a commutative ring R and ideals I, J, there is the canonical identification
     
given by  . In particular,   is the annihilator of I.
  • Given a ring R and an element r, let   denote the left multiplication by r. Then for any s, t in R,
     .
That is,   is right R-linear.
  • For any ring R,
    •   as rings when R is viewed as a right module over itself. Explicitly, this isomorphism is given by the left regular representation  .
    • Similarly,   as rings when R is viewed as a left module over itself. Textbooks or other references usually specify which convention is used.
    •   through   for any left module M.[1] (The module structure on Hom here comes from the right R-action on R; see #Module structures on Hom below.)
    •   is called the dual module of M; it is a left (resp. right) module if M is a right (resp. left) module over R with the module structure coming from the R-action on R. It is denoted by  .
  • Given a ring homomorphism RS of commutative rings and an S-module M, an R-linear map θ: SM is called a derivation if for any f, g in S, θ(f g) = f θ(g) + θ(f) g.
  • If S, T are unital associative algebras over a ring R, then an algebra homomorphism from S to T is a ring homomorphism that is also an R-module homomorphism.

Module structures on Hom edit

In short, Hom inherits a ring action that was not used up to form Hom. More precise, let M, N be left R-modules. Suppose M has a right action of a ring S that commutes with the R-action; i.e., M is an (R, S)-module. Then

 

has the structure of a left S-module defined by: for s in S and x in M,

 

It is well-defined (i.e.,   is R-linear) since

 

and   is a ring action since

 .

Note: the above verification would "fail" if one used the left R-action in place of the right S-action. In this sense, Hom is often said to "use up" the R-action.

Similarly, if M is a left R-module and N is an (R, S)-module, then   is a right S-module by  .

A matrix representation edit

The relationship between matrices and linear transformations in linear algebra generalizes in a natural way to module homomorphisms between free modules. Precisely, given a right R-module U, there is the canonical isomorphism of the abelian groups

 

obtained by viewing   consisting of column vectors and then writing f as an m × n matrix. In particular, viewing R as a right R-module and using  , one has

 ,

which turns out to be a ring isomorphism (as a composition corresponds to a matrix multiplication).

Note the above isomorphism is canonical; no choice is involved. On the other hand, if one is given a module homomorphism between finite-rank free modules, then a choice of an ordered basis corresponds to a choice of an isomorphism  . The above procedure then gives the matrix representation with respect to such choices of the bases. For more general modules, matrix representations may either lack uniqueness or not exist.

Defining edit

In practice, one often defines a module homomorphism by specifying its values on a generating set. More precisely, let M and N be left R-modules. Suppose a subset S generates M; i.e., there is a surjection   with a free module F with a basis indexed by S and kernel K (i.e., one has a free presentation). Then to give a module homomorphism   is to give a module homomorphism   that kills K (i.e., maps K to zero).

Operations edit

If   and   are module homomorphisms, then their direct sum is

 

and their tensor product is

 

Let   be a module homomorphism between left modules. The graph Γf of f is the submodule of MN given by

 ,

which is the image of the module homomorphism MMN, x → (x, f(x)), called the graph morphism.

The transpose of f is

 

If f is an isomorphism, then the transpose of the inverse of f is called the contragredient of f.

Exact sequences edit

Consider a sequence of module homomorphisms

 

Such a sequence is called a chain complex (or often just complex) if each composition is zero; i.e.,   or equivalently the image of   is contained in the kernel of  . (If the numbers increase instead of decrease, then it is called a cochain complex; e.g., de Rham complex.) A chain complex is called an exact sequence if  . A special case of an exact sequence is a short exact sequence:

 

where   is injective, the kernel of   is the image of   and   is surjective.

Any module homomorphism   defines an exact sequence

 

where   is the kernel of  , and   is the cokernel, that is the quotient of   by the image of  .

In the case of modules over a commutative ring, a sequence is exact if and only if it is exact at all the maximal ideals; that is all sequences

 

are exact, where the subscript   means the localization at a maximal ideal  .

If   are module homomorphisms, then they are said to form a fiber square (or pullback square), denoted by M ×B N, if it fits into

 

where  .

Example: Let   be commutative rings, and let I be the annihilator of the quotient B-module A/B (which is an ideal of A). Then canonical maps   form a fiber square with  

Endomorphisms of finitely generated modules edit

Let   be an endomorphism between finitely generated R-modules for a commutative ring R. Then

  •   is killed by its characteristic polynomial relative to the generators of M; see Nakayama's lemma#Proof.
  • If   is surjective, then it is injective.[2]

See also: Herbrand quotient (which can be defined for any endomorphism with some finiteness conditions.)

Variant: additive relations edit

An additive relation   from a module M to a module N is a submodule of  [3] In other words, it is a "many-valued" homomorphism defined on some submodule of M. The inverse   of f is the submodule  . Any additive relation f determines a homomorphism from a submodule of M to a quotient of N

 

where   consists of all elements x in M such that (x, y) belongs to f for some y in N.

A transgression that arises from a spectral sequence is an example of an additive relation.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bourbaki, Ch. II, §1.14, remark 2.
  2. ^ Matsumura, Theorem 2.4.
  3. ^ MacLane, Saunders (2012-12-06). Homology. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9783642620294.

References edit

  • Bourbaki, "Chapter II", Algebra[full citation needed]
  • S. MacLane, Homology[full citation needed]
  • Matsumura, H., Commutative ring theory, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, vol. 8, Translated from the Japanese by M. Reid (Second ed.)

module, homomorphism, algebra, module, homomorphism, function, between, modules, that, preserves, module, structures, explicitly, left, modules, over, ring, then, function, displaystyle, called, module, homomorphism, linear, displaystyle, displaystyle, other, . In algebra a module homomorphism is a function between modules that preserves the module structures Explicitly if M and N are left modules over a ring R then a function f M N displaystyle f M to N is called an R module homomorphism or an R linear map if for any x y in M and r in R f x y f x f y displaystyle f x y f x f y f r x r f x displaystyle f rx rf x In other words f is a group homomorphism for the underlying additive groups that commutes with scalar multiplication If M N are right R modules then the second condition is replaced with f x r f x r displaystyle f xr f x r The preimage of the zero element under f is called the kernel of f The set of all module homomorphisms from M to N is denoted by Hom R M N displaystyle operatorname Hom R M N It is an abelian group under pointwise addition but is not necessarily a module unless R is commutative The composition of module homomorphisms is again a module homomorphism and the identity map on a module is a module homomorphism Thus all the say left modules together with all the module homomorphisms between them form the category of modules Contents 1 Terminology 2 Examples 3 Module structures on Hom 4 A matrix representation 5 Defining 6 Operations 7 Exact sequences 8 Endomorphisms of finitely generated modules 9 Variant additive relations 10 See also 11 Notes 12 ReferencesTerminology editA module homomorphism is called a module isomorphism if it admits an inverse homomorphism in particular it is a bijection Conversely one can show a bijective module homomorphism is an isomorphism i e the inverse is a module homomorphism In particular a module homomorphism is an isomorphism if and only if it is an isomorphism between the underlying abelian groups The isomorphism theorems hold for module homomorphisms A module homomorphism from a module M to itself is called an endomorphism and an isomorphism from M to itself an automorphism One writes End R M Hom R M M displaystyle operatorname End R M operatorname Hom R M M nbsp for the set of all endomorphisms of a module M It is not only an abelian group but is also a ring with multiplication given by function composition called the endomorphism ring of M The group of units of this ring is the automorphism group of M Schur s lemma says that a homomorphism between simple modules modules with no non trivial submodules must be either zero or an isomorphism In particular the endomorphism ring of a simple module is a division ring In the language of the category theory an injective homomorphism is also called a monomorphism and a surjective homomorphism an epimorphism Examples editThe zero map M N that maps every element to zero A linear transformation between vector spaces Hom Z Z n Z m Z gcd n m displaystyle operatorname Hom mathbb Z mathbb Z n mathbb Z m mathbb Z operatorname gcd n m nbsp For a commutative ring R and ideals I J there is the canonical identification Hom R R I R J r R r I J J displaystyle operatorname Hom R R I R J r in R rI subset J J nbsp given by f f 1 displaystyle f mapsto f 1 nbsp In particular Hom R R I R displaystyle operatorname Hom R R I R nbsp is the annihilator of I Given a ring R and an element r let l r R R displaystyle l r R to R nbsp denote the left multiplication by r Then for any s t in R l r s t r s t l r s t displaystyle l r st rst l r s t nbsp That is l r displaystyle l r nbsp is right R linear For any ring R End R R R displaystyle operatorname End R R R nbsp as rings when R is viewed as a right module over itself Explicitly this isomorphism is given by the left regular representation R End R R r l r displaystyle R overset sim to operatorname End R R r mapsto l r nbsp Similarly End R R R o p displaystyle operatorname End R R R op nbsp as rings when R is viewed as a left module over itself Textbooks or other references usually specify which convention is used Hom R R M M displaystyle operatorname Hom R R M M nbsp through f f 1 displaystyle f mapsto f 1 nbsp for any left module M 1 The module structure on Hom here comes from the right R action on R see Module structures on Hom below Hom R M R displaystyle operatorname Hom R M R nbsp is called the dual module of M it is a left resp right module if M is a right resp left module over R with the module structure coming from the R action on R It is denoted by M displaystyle M nbsp Given a ring homomorphism R S of commutative rings and an S module M an R linear map 8 S M is called a derivation if for any f g in S 8 f g f 8 g 8 f g If S T are unital associative algebras over a ring R then an algebra homomorphism from S to T is a ring homomorphism that is also an R module homomorphism Module structures on Hom editIn short Hom inherits a ring action that was not used up to form Hom More precise let M N be left R modules Suppose M has a right action of a ring S that commutes with the R action i e M is an R S module Then Hom R M N displaystyle operatorname Hom R M N nbsp has the structure of a left S module defined by for s in S and x in M s f x f x s displaystyle s cdot f x f xs nbsp It is well defined i e s f displaystyle s cdot f nbsp is R linear since s f r x f r x s r f x s r s f x displaystyle s cdot f rx f rxs rf xs r s cdot f x nbsp and s f displaystyle s cdot f nbsp is a ring action since s t f x f x s t t f x s s t f x displaystyle st cdot f x f xst t cdot f xs s cdot t cdot f x nbsp Note the above verification would fail if one used the left R action in place of the right S action In this sense Hom is often said to use up the R action Similarly if M is a left R module and N is an R S module then Hom R M N displaystyle operatorname Hom R M N nbsp is a right S module by f s x f x s displaystyle f cdot s x f x s nbsp A matrix representation editThe relationship between matrices and linear transformations in linear algebra generalizes in a natural way to module homomorphisms between free modules Precisely given a right R module U there is the canonical isomorphism of the abelian groups Hom R U n U m f f i j M m n End R U displaystyle operatorname Hom R U oplus n U oplus m overset f mapsto f ij underset sim to M m n operatorname End R U nbsp obtained by viewing U n displaystyle U oplus n nbsp consisting of column vectors and then writing f as an m n matrix In particular viewing R as a right R module and using End R R R displaystyle operatorname End R R simeq R nbsp one has End R R n M n R displaystyle operatorname End R R n simeq M n R nbsp which turns out to be a ring isomorphism as a composition corresponds to a matrix multiplication Note the above isomorphism is canonical no choice is involved On the other hand if one is given a module homomorphism between finite rank free modules then a choice of an ordered basis corresponds to a choice of an isomorphism F R n displaystyle F simeq R n nbsp The above procedure then gives the matrix representation with respect to such choices of the bases For more general modules matrix representations may either lack uniqueness or not exist Defining editIn practice one often defines a module homomorphism by specifying its values on a generating set More precisely let M and N be left R modules Suppose a subset S generates M i e there is a surjection F M displaystyle F to M nbsp with a free module F with a basis indexed by S and kernel K i e one has a free presentation Then to give a module homomorphism M N displaystyle M to N nbsp is to give a module homomorphism F N displaystyle F to N nbsp that kills K i e maps K to zero Operations editIf f M N displaystyle f M to N nbsp and g M N displaystyle g M to N nbsp are module homomorphisms then their direct sum is f g M M N N x y f x g y displaystyle f oplus g M oplus M to N oplus N x y mapsto f x g y nbsp and their tensor product is f g M M N N x y f x g y displaystyle f otimes g M otimes M to N otimes N x otimes y mapsto f x otimes g y nbsp Let f M N displaystyle f M to N nbsp be a module homomorphism between left modules The graph Gf of f is the submodule of M N given by G f x f x x M displaystyle Gamma f x f x x in M nbsp which is the image of the module homomorphism M M N x x f x called the graph morphism The transpose of f is f N M f a a f displaystyle f N to M f alpha alpha circ f nbsp If f is an isomorphism then the transpose of the inverse of f is called the contragredient of f Exact sequences editConsider a sequence of module homomorphisms f 3 M 2 f 2 M 1 f 1 M 0 f 0 M 1 f 1 displaystyle cdots overset f 3 longrightarrow M 2 overset f 2 longrightarrow M 1 overset f 1 longrightarrow M 0 overset f 0 longrightarrow M 1 overset f 1 longrightarrow cdots nbsp Such a sequence is called a chain complex or often just complex if each composition is zero i e f i f i 1 0 displaystyle f i circ f i 1 0 nbsp or equivalently the image of f i 1 displaystyle f i 1 nbsp is contained in the kernel of f i displaystyle f i nbsp If the numbers increase instead of decrease then it is called a cochain complex e g de Rham complex A chain complex is called an exact sequence if im f i 1 ker f i displaystyle operatorname im f i 1 operatorname ker f i nbsp A special case of an exact sequence is a short exact sequence 0 A f B g C 0 displaystyle 0 to A overset f to B overset g to C to 0 nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp is injective the kernel of g displaystyle g nbsp is the image of f displaystyle f nbsp and g displaystyle g nbsp is surjective Any module homomorphism f M N displaystyle f M to N nbsp defines an exact sequence 0 K M f N C 0 displaystyle 0 to K to M overset f to N to C to 0 nbsp where K displaystyle K nbsp is the kernel of f displaystyle f nbsp and C displaystyle C nbsp is the cokernel that is the quotient of N displaystyle N nbsp by the image of f displaystyle f nbsp In the case of modules over a commutative ring a sequence is exact if and only if it is exact at all the maximal ideals that is all sequences 0 A m f B m g C m 0 displaystyle 0 to A mathfrak m overset f to B mathfrak m overset g to C mathfrak m to 0 nbsp are exact where the subscript m displaystyle mathfrak m nbsp means the localization at a maximal ideal m displaystyle mathfrak m nbsp If f M B g N B displaystyle f M to B g N to B nbsp are module homomorphisms then they are said to form a fiber square or pullback square denoted by M B N if it fits into 0 M B N M N ϕ B 0 displaystyle 0 to M times B N to M times N overset phi to B to 0 nbsp where ϕ x y f x g x displaystyle phi x y f x g x nbsp Example Let B A displaystyle B subset A nbsp be commutative rings and let I be the annihilator of the quotient B module A B which is an ideal of A Then canonical maps A A I B I A I displaystyle A to A I B I to A I nbsp form a fiber square with B A A I B I displaystyle B A times A I B I nbsp Endomorphisms of finitely generated modules editLet ϕ M M displaystyle phi M to M nbsp be an endomorphism between finitely generated R modules for a commutative ring R Then ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is killed by its characteristic polynomial relative to the generators of M see Nakayama s lemma Proof If ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp is surjective then it is injective 2 See also Herbrand quotient which can be defined for any endomorphism with some finiteness conditions Variant additive relations editSee also binary relation An additive relation M N displaystyle M to N nbsp from a module M to a module N is a submodule of M N displaystyle M oplus N nbsp 3 In other words it is a many valued homomorphism defined on some submodule of M The inverse f 1 displaystyle f 1 nbsp of f is the submodule y x x y f displaystyle y x x y in f nbsp Any additive relation f determines a homomorphism from a submodule of M to a quotient of N D f N y 0 y f displaystyle D f to N y 0 y in f nbsp where D f displaystyle D f nbsp consists of all elements x in M such that x y belongs to f for some y in N A transgression that arises from a spectral sequence is an example of an additive relation See also editMapping cone homological algebra Smith normal form Chain complex PairingNotes edit Bourbaki Ch II 1 14 remark 2 Matsumura Theorem 2 4 MacLane Saunders 2012 12 06 Homology Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 9783642620294 References editBourbaki Chapter II Algebra full citation needed S MacLane Homology full citation needed Matsumura H Commutative ring theory Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics vol 8 Translated from the Japanese by M Reid Second ed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Module homomorphism amp oldid 1188952716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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