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Graded ring

In mathematics, in particular abstract algebra, a graded ring is a ring such that the underlying additive group is a direct sum of abelian groups such that . The index set is usually the set of nonnegative integers or the set of integers, but can be any monoid. The direct sum decomposition is usually referred to as gradation or grading.

A graded module is defined similarly (see below for the precise definition). It generalizes graded vector spaces. A graded module that is also a graded ring is called a graded algebra. A graded ring could also be viewed as a graded -algebra.

The associativity is not important (in fact not used at all) in the definition of a graded ring; hence, the notion applies to non-associative algebras as well; e.g., one can consider a graded Lie algebra.

First properties Edit

Generally, the index set of a graded ring is assumed to be the set of nonnegative integers, unless otherwise explicitly specified. This is the case in this article.

A graded ring is a ring that is decomposed into a direct sum

 

of additive groups, such that

 

for all nonnegative integers   and  .

A nonzero element of   is said to be homogeneous of degree  . By definition of a direct sum, every nonzero element   of   can be uniquely written as a sum   where each   is either 0 or homogeneous of degree  . The nonzero   are the homogeneous components of  .

Some basic properties are:

  •   is a subring of  ; in particular, the multiplicative identity   is an homogeneous element of degree zero.
  • For any  ,   is a two-sided  -module, and the direct sum decomposition is a direct sum of  -modules.
  •   is an associative  -algebra.

An ideal   is homogeneous, if for every  , the homogeneous components of   also belong to   (Equivalently, if it is a graded submodule of  ; see § Graded module.) The intersection of a homogeneous ideal   with   is an  -submodule of   called the homogeneous part of degree   of  . A homogeneous ideal is the direct sum of its homogeneous parts.

If   is a two-sided homogeneous ideal in  , then   is also a graded ring, decomposed as

 

where   is the homogeneous part of degree   of  .

Basic examples Edit

  • Any (non-graded) ring R can be given a gradation by letting  , and   for i ≠ 0. This is called the trivial gradation on R.
  • The polynomial ring   is graded by degree: it is a direct sum of   consisting of homogeneous polynomials of degree i.
  • Let S be the set of all nonzero homogeneous elements in a graded integral domain R. Then the localization of R with respect to S is a  -graded ring.
  • If I is an ideal in a commutative ring R, then   is a graded ring called the associated graded ring of R along I; geometrically, it is the coordinate ring of the normal cone along the subvariety defined by I.
  • Let X be a topological space, Hi(X; R) the ith cohomology group with coefficients in a ring R. Then H *(X; R), the cohomology ring of X with coefficients in R, is a graded ring whose underlying group is   with the multiplicative structure given by the cup product.

Graded module Edit

The corresponding idea in module theory is that of a graded module, namely a left module M over a graded ring R such that also

 

and

 

Example: a graded vector space is an example of a graded module over a field (with the field having trivial grading).

Example: a graded ring is a graded module over itself. An ideal in a graded ring is homogeneous if and only if it is a graded submodule. The annihilator of a graded module is a homogeneous ideal.

Example: Given an ideal I in a commutative ring R and an R-module M, the direct sum   is a graded module over the associated graded ring  .

A morphism   between graded modules, called a graded morphism, is a morphism of underlying modules that respects grading; i.e.,  . A graded submodule is a submodule that is a graded module in own right and such that the set-theoretic inclusion is a morphism of graded modules. Explicitly, a graded module N is a graded submodule of M if and only if it is a submodule of M and satisfies  . The kernel and the image of a morphism of graded modules are graded submodules.

Remark: To give a graded morphism from a graded ring to another graded ring with the image lying in the center is the same as to give the structure of a graded algebra to the latter ring.

Given a graded module  , the  -twist of   is a graded module defined by  . (cf. Serre's twisting sheaf in algebraic geometry.)

Let M and N be graded modules. If   is a morphism of modules, then f is said to have degree d if  . An exterior derivative of differential forms in differential geometry is an example of such a morphism having degree 1.

Invariants of graded modules Edit

Given a graded module M over a commutative graded ring R, one can associate the formal power series  :

 

(assuming   are finite.) It is called the Hilbert–Poincaré series of M.

A graded module is said to be finitely generated if the underlying module is finitely generated. The generators may be taken to be homogeneous (by replacing the generators by their homogeneous parts.)

Suppose R is a polynomial ring  , k a field, and M a finitely generated graded module over it. Then the function   is called the Hilbert function of M. The function coincides with the integer-valued polynomial for large n called the Hilbert polynomial of M.

Graded algebra Edit

An algebra A over a ring R is a graded algebra if it is graded as a ring.

In the usual case where the ring R is not graded (in particular if R is a field), it is given the trivial grading (every element of R is of degree 0). Thus,   and the graded pieces   are R-modules.

In the case where the ring R is also a graded ring, then one requires that

 

In other words, we require A to be a graded left module over R.

Examples of graded algebras are common in mathematics:

  • Polynomial rings. The homogeneous elements of degree n are exactly the homogeneous polynomials of degree n.
  • The tensor algebra   of a vector space V. The homogeneous elements of degree n are the tensors of order n,  .
  • The exterior algebra   and the symmetric algebra   are also graded algebras.
  • The cohomology ring   in any cohomology theory is also graded, being the direct sum of the cohomology groups  .

Graded algebras are much used in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry, homological algebra, and algebraic topology. One example is the close relationship between homogeneous polynomials and projective varieties (cf. Homogeneous coordinate ring.)

G-graded rings and algebras Edit

The above definitions have been generalized to rings graded using any monoid G as an index set. A G-graded ring R is a ring with a direct sum decomposition

 

such that

 

Elements of R that lie inside   for some   are said to be homogeneous of grade i.

The previously defined notion of "graded ring" now becomes the same thing as an  -graded ring, where   is the monoid of natural numbers under addition. The definitions for graded modules and algebras can also be extended this way replacing the indexing set   with any monoid G.

Remarks:

  • If we do not require that the ring have an identity element, semigroups may replace monoids.

Examples:

Anticommutativity Edit

Some graded rings (or algebras) are endowed with an anticommutative structure. This notion requires a homomorphism of the monoid of the gradation into the additive monoid of  , the field with two elements. Specifically, a signed monoid consists of a pair   where   is a monoid and   is a homomorphism of additive monoids. An anticommutative  -graded ring is a ring A graded with respect to Γ such that:

 

for all homogeneous elements x and y.

Examples Edit

  • An exterior algebra is an example of an anticommutative algebra, graded with respect to the structure   where   is the quotient map.
  • A supercommutative algebra (sometimes called a skew-commutative associative ring) is the same thing as an anticommutative  -graded algebra, where   is the identity map of the additive structure of  .

Graded monoid Edit

Intuitively, a graded monoid is the subset of a graded ring,  , generated by the  's, without using the additive part. That is, the set of elements of the graded monoid is  .

Formally, a graded monoid[1] is a monoid  , with a gradation function   such that  . Note that the gradation of   is necessarily 0. Some authors request furthermore that   when m is not the identity.

Assuming the gradations of non-identity elements are non-zero, the number of elements of gradation n is at most   where g is the cardinality of a generating set G of the monoid. Therefore the number of elements of gradation n or less is at most   (for  ) or   else. Indeed, each such element is the product of at most n elements of G, and only   such products exist. Similarly, the identity element can not be written as the product of two non-identity elements. That is, there is no unit divisor in such a graded monoid.

Power series indexed by a graded monoid Edit

This notions allows to extends the notion of power series ring. Instead of having the indexing family being  , the indexing family could be any graded monoid, assuming that the number of elements of degree n is finite, for each integer n.

More formally, let   be an arbitrary semiring and   a graded monoid. Then   denotes the semiring of power series with coefficients in K indexed by R. Its elements are functions from R to K. The sum of two elements   is defined pointwise, it is the function sending   to  , and the product is the function sending   to the infinite sum  . This sum is correctly defined (i.e., finite) because, for each m, there are only a finite number of pairs (p, q) such that pq = m.

Example Edit

In formal language theory, given an alphabet A, the free monoid of words over A can be considered as a graded monoid, where the gradation of a word is its length.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Sakarovitch, Jacques (2009). "Part II: The power of algebra". Elements of automata theory. Translated by Thomas, Reuben. Cambridge University Press. p. 384. ISBN 978-0-521-84425-3. Zbl 1188.68177.

Matsumura, H. (1989). "5 Dimension theory §S3 Graded rings, the Hilbert function and the Samuel function". Commutative Ring Theory. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics. Vol. 8. Translated by Reid, M. (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-71712-1.

graded, ring, mathematics, particular, abstract, algebra, graded, ring, ring, such, that, underlying, additive, group, direct, abelian, groups, displaystyle, such, that, displaystyle, subseteq, index, usually, nonnegative, integers, integers, monoid, direct, d. In mathematics in particular abstract algebra a graded ring is a ring such that the underlying additive group is a direct sum of abelian groups R i displaystyle R i such that R i R j R i j displaystyle R i R j subseteq R i j The index set is usually the set of nonnegative integers or the set of integers but can be any monoid The direct sum decomposition is usually referred to as gradation or grading A graded module is defined similarly see below for the precise definition It generalizes graded vector spaces A graded module that is also a graded ring is called a graded algebra A graded ring could also be viewed as a graded Z displaystyle mathbb Z algebra The associativity is not important in fact not used at all in the definition of a graded ring hence the notion applies to non associative algebras as well e g one can consider a graded Lie algebra Contents 1 First properties 2 Basic examples 3 Graded module 4 Invariants of graded modules 5 Graded algebra 6 G graded rings and algebras 6 1 Anticommutativity 6 2 Examples 7 Graded monoid 7 1 Power series indexed by a graded monoid 7 2 Example 8 See also 9 ReferencesFirst properties EditGenerally the index set of a graded ring is assumed to be the set of nonnegative integers unless otherwise explicitly specified This is the case in this article A graded ring is a ring that is decomposed into a direct sum R n 0 R n R 0 R 1 R 2 displaystyle R bigoplus n 0 infty R n R 0 oplus R 1 oplus R 2 oplus cdots nbsp of additive groups such that R m R n R m n displaystyle R m R n subseteq R m n nbsp for all nonnegative integers m displaystyle m nbsp and n displaystyle n nbsp A nonzero element of R n displaystyle R n nbsp is said to be homogeneous of degree n displaystyle n nbsp By definition of a direct sum every nonzero element a displaystyle a nbsp of R displaystyle R nbsp can be uniquely written as a sum a a 0 a 1 a n displaystyle a a 0 a 1 cdots a n nbsp where each a i displaystyle a i nbsp is either 0 or homogeneous of degree i displaystyle i nbsp The nonzero a i displaystyle a i nbsp are the homogeneous components of a displaystyle a nbsp Some basic properties are R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp is a subring of R displaystyle R nbsp in particular the multiplicative identity 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp is an homogeneous element of degree zero For any n displaystyle n nbsp R n displaystyle R n nbsp is a two sided R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp module and the direct sum decomposition is a direct sum of R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp modules R displaystyle R nbsp is an associative R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp algebra An ideal I R displaystyle I subseteq R nbsp is homogeneous if for every a I displaystyle a in I nbsp the homogeneous components of a displaystyle a nbsp also belong to I displaystyle I nbsp Equivalently if it is a graded submodule of R displaystyle R nbsp see Graded module The intersection of a homogeneous ideal I displaystyle I nbsp with R n displaystyle R n nbsp is an R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp submodule of R n displaystyle R n nbsp called the homogeneous part of degree n displaystyle n nbsp of I displaystyle I nbsp A homogeneous ideal is the direct sum of its homogeneous parts If I displaystyle I nbsp is a two sided homogeneous ideal in R displaystyle R nbsp then R I displaystyle R I nbsp is also a graded ring decomposed as R I n 0 R n I n displaystyle R I bigoplus n 0 infty R n I n nbsp where I n displaystyle I n nbsp is the homogeneous part of degree n displaystyle n nbsp of I displaystyle I nbsp Basic examples EditAny non graded ring R can be given a gradation by letting R 0 R displaystyle R 0 R nbsp and R i 0 displaystyle R i 0 nbsp for i 0 This is called the trivial gradation on R The polynomial ring R k t 1 t n displaystyle R k t 1 ldots t n nbsp is graded by degree it is a direct sum of R i displaystyle R i nbsp consisting of homogeneous polynomials of degree i Let S be the set of all nonzero homogeneous elements in a graded integral domain R Then the localization of R with respect to S is a Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp graded ring If I is an ideal in a commutative ring R then n 0 I n I n 1 displaystyle bigoplus n 0 infty I n I n 1 nbsp is a graded ring called the associated graded ring of R along I geometrically it is the coordinate ring of the normal cone along the subvariety defined by I Let X be a topological space H i X R the ith cohomology group with coefficients in a ring R Then H X R the cohomology ring of X with coefficients in R is a graded ring whose underlying group is i 0 H i X R displaystyle bigoplus i 0 infty H i X R nbsp with the multiplicative structure given by the cup product Graded module EditThe corresponding idea in module theory is that of a graded module namely a left module M over a graded ring R such that also M i N M i displaystyle M bigoplus i in mathbb N M i nbsp and R i M j M i j displaystyle R i M j subseteq M i j nbsp Example a graded vector space is an example of a graded module over a field with the field having trivial grading Example a graded ring is a graded module over itself An ideal in a graded ring is homogeneous if and only if it is a graded submodule The annihilator of a graded module is a homogeneous ideal Example Given an ideal I in a commutative ring R and an R module M the direct sum n 0 I n M I n 1 M displaystyle bigoplus n 0 infty I n M I n 1 M nbsp is a graded module over the associated graded ring 0 I n I n 1 displaystyle bigoplus 0 infty I n I n 1 nbsp A morphism f N M displaystyle f N to M nbsp between graded modules called a graded morphism is a morphism of underlying modules that respects grading i e f N i M i displaystyle f N i subseteq M i nbsp A graded submodule is a submodule that is a graded module in own right and such that the set theoretic inclusion is a morphism of graded modules Explicitly a graded module N is a graded submodule of M if and only if it is a submodule of M and satisfies N i N M i displaystyle N i N cap M i nbsp The kernel and the image of a morphism of graded modules are graded submodules Remark To give a graded morphism from a graded ring to another graded ring with the image lying in the center is the same as to give the structure of a graded algebra to the latter ring Given a graded module M displaystyle M nbsp the ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp twist of M displaystyle M nbsp is a graded module defined by M ℓ n M n ℓ displaystyle M ell n M n ell nbsp cf Serre s twisting sheaf in algebraic geometry Let M and N be graded modules If f M N displaystyle f colon M to N nbsp is a morphism of modules then f is said to have degree d if f M n N n d displaystyle f M n subseteq N n d nbsp An exterior derivative of differential forms in differential geometry is an example of such a morphism having degree 1 Invariants of graded modules EditGiven a graded module M over a commutative graded ring R one can associate the formal power series P M t Z t displaystyle P M t in mathbb Z t nbsp P M t ℓ M n t n displaystyle P M t sum ell M n t n nbsp assuming ℓ M n displaystyle ell M n nbsp are finite It is called the Hilbert Poincare series of M A graded module is said to be finitely generated if the underlying module is finitely generated The generators may be taken to be homogeneous by replacing the generators by their homogeneous parts Suppose R is a polynomial ring k x 0 x n displaystyle k x 0 dots x n nbsp k a field and M a finitely generated graded module over it Then the function n dim k M n displaystyle n mapsto dim k M n nbsp is called the Hilbert function of M The function coincides with the integer valued polynomial for large n called the Hilbert polynomial of M Graded algebra EditSee also Graded Lie algebra An algebra A over a ring R is a graded algebra if it is graded as a ring In the usual case where the ring R is not graded in particular if R is a field it is given the trivial grading every element of R is of degree 0 Thus R A 0 displaystyle R subseteq A 0 nbsp and the graded pieces A i displaystyle A i nbsp are R modules In the case where the ring R is also a graded ring then one requires that R i A j A i j displaystyle R i A j subseteq A i j nbsp In other words we require A to be a graded left module over R Examples of graded algebras are common in mathematics Polynomial rings The homogeneous elements of degree n are exactly the homogeneous polynomials of degree n The tensor algebra T V displaystyle T bullet V nbsp of a vector space V The homogeneous elements of degree n are the tensors of order n T n V displaystyle T n V nbsp The exterior algebra V displaystyle textstyle bigwedge nolimits bullet V nbsp and the symmetric algebra S V displaystyle S bullet V nbsp are also graded algebras The cohomology ring H displaystyle H bullet nbsp in any cohomology theory is also graded being the direct sum of the cohomology groups H n displaystyle H n nbsp Graded algebras are much used in commutative algebra and algebraic geometry homological algebra and algebraic topology One example is the close relationship between homogeneous polynomials and projective varieties cf Homogeneous coordinate ring G graded rings and algebras EditThe above definitions have been generalized to rings graded using any monoid G as an index set A G graded ring R is a ring with a direct sum decomposition R i G R i displaystyle R bigoplus i in G R i nbsp such that R i R j R i j displaystyle R i R j subseteq R i cdot j nbsp Elements of R that lie inside R i displaystyle R i nbsp for some i G displaystyle i in G nbsp are said to be homogeneous of grade i The previously defined notion of graded ring now becomes the same thing as an N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp graded ring where N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp is the monoid of natural numbers under addition The definitions for graded modules and algebras can also be extended this way replacing the indexing set N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp with any monoid G Remarks If we do not require that the ring have an identity element semigroups may replace monoids Examples A group naturally grades the corresponding group ring similarly monoid rings are graded by the corresponding monoid An associative superalgebra is another term for a Z 2 displaystyle mathbb Z 2 nbsp graded algebra Examples include Clifford algebras Here the homogeneous elements are either of degree 0 even or 1 odd Anticommutativity Edit Some graded rings or algebras are endowed with an anticommutative structure This notion requires a homomorphism of the monoid of the gradation into the additive monoid of Z 2 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 2 mathbb Z nbsp the field with two elements Specifically a signed monoid consists of a pair G e displaystyle Gamma varepsilon nbsp where G displaystyle Gamma nbsp is a monoid and e G Z 2 Z displaystyle varepsilon colon Gamma to mathbb Z 2 mathbb Z nbsp is a homomorphism of additive monoids An anticommutative G displaystyle Gamma nbsp graded ring is a ring A graded with respect to G such that x y 1 e deg x e deg y y x displaystyle xy 1 varepsilon deg x varepsilon deg y yx nbsp for all homogeneous elements x and y Examples Edit An exterior algebra is an example of an anticommutative algebra graded with respect to the structure Z e displaystyle mathbb Z varepsilon nbsp where e Z Z 2 Z displaystyle varepsilon colon mathbb Z to mathbb Z 2 mathbb Z nbsp is the quotient map A supercommutative algebra sometimes called a skew commutative associative ring is the same thing as an anticommutative Z e displaystyle mathbb Z varepsilon nbsp graded algebra where e displaystyle varepsilon nbsp is the identity map of the additive structure of Z 2 Z displaystyle mathbb Z 2 mathbb Z nbsp Graded monoid EditIntuitively a graded monoid is the subset of a graded ring n N 0 R n displaystyle bigoplus n in mathbb N 0 R n nbsp generated by the R n displaystyle R n nbsp s without using the additive part That is the set of elements of the graded monoid is n N 0 R n displaystyle bigcup n in mathbb N 0 R n nbsp Formally a graded monoid 1 is a monoid M displaystyle M cdot nbsp with a gradation function ϕ M N 0 displaystyle phi M to mathbb N 0 nbsp such that ϕ m m ϕ m ϕ m displaystyle phi m cdot m phi m phi m nbsp Note that the gradation of 1 M displaystyle 1 M nbsp is necessarily 0 Some authors request furthermore that ϕ m 0 displaystyle phi m neq 0 nbsp when m is not the identity Assuming the gradations of non identity elements are non zero the number of elements of gradation n is at most g n displaystyle g n nbsp where g is the cardinality of a generating set G of the monoid Therefore the number of elements of gradation n or less is at most n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp for g 1 displaystyle g 1 nbsp or g n 1 1 g 1 displaystyle frac g n 1 1 g 1 nbsp else Indeed each such element is the product of at most n elements of G and only g n 1 1 g 1 displaystyle frac g n 1 1 g 1 nbsp such products exist Similarly the identity element can not be written as the product of two non identity elements That is there is no unit divisor in such a graded monoid Power series indexed by a graded monoid Edit See also Novikov ring This notions allows to extends the notion of power series ring Instead of having the indexing family being N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp the indexing family could be any graded monoid assuming that the number of elements of degree n is finite for each integer n More formally let K K K displaystyle K K times K nbsp be an arbitrary semiring and R ϕ displaystyle R cdot phi nbsp a graded monoid Then K R displaystyle K langle langle R rangle rangle nbsp denotes the semiring of power series with coefficients in K indexed by R Its elements are functions from R to K The sum of two elements s s K R displaystyle s s in K langle langle R rangle rangle nbsp is defined pointwise it is the function sending m R displaystyle m in R nbsp to s m K s m displaystyle s m K s m nbsp and the product is the function sending m R displaystyle m in R nbsp to the infinite sum p q R p q m s p K s q displaystyle sum p q in R atop p cdot q m s p times K s q nbsp This sum is correctly defined i e finite because for each m there are only a finite number of pairs p q such that pq m Example Edit In formal language theory given an alphabet A the free monoid of words over A can be considered as a graded monoid where the gradation of a word is its length See also EditAssociated graded ring Differential graded algebra Filtered algebra a generalization Graded mathematics Graded category Graded vector space Tensor algebra Differential graded moduleReferences Edit Sakarovitch Jacques 2009 Part II The power of algebra Elements of automata theory Translated by Thomas Reuben Cambridge University Press p 384 ISBN 978 0 521 84425 3 Zbl 1188 68177 Lang Serge 2002 Algebra Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 211 Revised third ed New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 95385 4 MR 1878556 Bourbaki N 1974 Ch 1 3 3 3 Algebra I ISBN 978 3 540 64243 5 Steenbrink J 1977 Intersection form for quasi homogeneous singularities PDF Compositio Mathematica 34 2 211 223 See p 211 ISSN 0010 437X Matsumura H 1989 5 Dimension theory S3 Graded rings the Hilbert function and the Samuel function Commutative Ring Theory Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics Vol 8 Translated by Reid M 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 71712 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Graded ring amp oldid 1105931884 Graded algebra, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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