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Invariance of Modules under Automorphisms of their Envelopes and Covers [Minkštas viršelis]

(St Louis University, Missouri), (Universidad de Murcia, Spain),
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 228x152x13 mm, weight: 350 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108949533
  • ISBN-13: 9781108949538
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 228x152x13 mm, weight: 350 g, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Serija: London Mathematical Society Lecture Note Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1108949533
  • ISBN-13: 9781108949538
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"The study of modules which are invariant under the action of certain subsets of the endomorphism ring of their injective envelope can be drawn back to the pioneering work of Johnson and Wong in which they characterized quasi-injective modules as those modules which are invariant under any endomorphism of their injective envelope. Later, Dickson and Fuller studied modules which are invariant under the group of all automorphisms of their injective envelope and proved that any indecomposable automorphism-invariant module over an F-algebra A is quasi-injective provided that F is a field with more than two elements. But after that this topic remained in dormant stage for some time until Lee and Zhou picked it up again in their paper where they called such modules auto-invariant modules. But the major breakthrough on this topic came from two papers that appeared a few months later: one of them was a paper of Er, Singh and Srivastava where they proved that the automorphism-invariant modules are precisely the pseudo-injective modules studied earlier by Teply, Jain, Clark, Huynh and others. The other one was a paper by Guil Asensio, and Srivastava where they proved that automorphism-invariant modules satisfy the exchange property and also they provide a new class of clean modules. Soon after this Guil Asensio and Srivastava extended the result of Dickson and Fuller by proving that if A is an algebra over a field F with more than two elements, then a module over A is automorphism-invariant if and only if it is quasi-injective. In 2015, in a paper published in the Israel Journal of Mathematics, Guil Asensio, Tutuncu and Srivastava laid down the foundation of general theory of modules invariant under automorphisms (resp. endomorphisms) of envelopes and covers. In this general theory of modules invariant under automorphisms (resp. endomorphisms) of envelopes and covers, we have obtained many interesting properties of such modules and found examples of some important classes of modules. When this theory is applied tosome particular situations, then we obtain results that extend and simplify several results existing in the literature. For example, as a consequence of these general results, one obtains that modules invariant under automorphisms of their injective (resp., pure-injective) envelopes satisfy the full exchange property. These results extend well-known results of Warfield, Fuchs, Huisgen-Zimmermann and Zimmermann. Most importantly, this study yields us a new tool and new perspective to look at generalizations of injective, pure-injective or at-cotorsion modules. Until now most of the generalizations of injective modules were focussed on relaxing conditions on lifting of homomorphisms but this theory has opened up a whole new direction in the study of moduletheory"--

Recenzijos

'This monograph covers many interesting and important results on these topics that have appeared in recent years.' Xiaoxiang Zhang, Mathematical Reviews/MathSciNet

Daugiau informacijos

Provides a unified treatment of the study of modules invariant under automorphisms of their envelopes and covers.
Preface vii
1 Preliminaries
1(55)
1.1 Basics of Ring Theory and Module Theory
1(6)
1.2 Simple and Semisimple Modules
7(2)
1.3 Essential and Closed Submodules
9(4)
1.4 Prime Rings and Semiprime Rings
13(1)
1.5 Classical Rings of Fractions and Semiprime Goldie Rings
14(2)
1.6 Local, Semilocal and Semiperfect Rings
16(1)
1.7 Injective and Projective Modules
17(5)
1.8 Injective Envelope and Quasi-Injective Modules
22(6)
1.9 Flat Modules
28(9)
1.10 Exchange Property of Modules
37(13)
1.11 PureTnjective and Cotorsion Modules
50(6)
2 Modules Invariant under Automorphisms of Envelopes
56(14)
2.1 Introduction to Envelopes
56(2)
2.2 Modules Invariant under Endomorphisms and Automorphisms
58(2)
2.3 Additive Unit Structure of von Neumann Regular Rings
60(7)
2.4 Applications of Additive Unit Structure of von Neumann Regular Rings
67(3)
3 Structure and Properties of Modules Invariant under Automorphisms
70(11)
3.1 Structure of Modules Invariant under Automorphisms
71(3)
3.2 Properties of Modules Invariant under Automorphisms
74(3)
3.3 Applications
77(2)
3.4 Modules Invariant under Monomorphisms
79(2)
4 Automorphism-Invariant Modules
81(37)
4.1 Some Characterizations of Automorphism-Invariant Modules
81(4)
4.2 Nonsingular Automorphism-Invariant Rings
85(2)
4.3 When Is an Automorphism-Invariant Module a Quasi-Injective Module
87(17)
4.4 Rings Whose Cyclic Modules Are Automorphism-Invariant
104(2)
4.5 Rings Whose Each One-Sided Ideal Is Automorphism-Invariant
106(12)
5 Modules Coinvariant under Automorphisms of their Covers
118(23)
5.1 Structure and Properties
119(4)
5.2 Automorphism-Coinvariant Modules
123(3)
5.3 Dual Automorphism-Invariant Modules
126(15)
6 Schroder-Bernstein Problem
141(10)
6.1 Schroder-Bernstein Problem for k-Endomorphism Invariant Modules
141(6)
6.2 Schroder-Bernstein Problem for Automorphism-Invariant Modules
147(4)
7 Automorphism-Extendable Modules
151(46)
7.1 General Properties of Automorphism-Extendable Modules
153(4)
7.2 Semi-Artinian Automorphism-Extendable Modules
157(4)
7.3 Automorphism-Extendable Modules that Are Not Singular
161(7)
7.4 Modules over Strongly Prime Rings
168(4)
7.5 Modules over Hereditary Prime Rings
172(6)
7.6 General Properties of Endomorphism-Extendable Modules and Rings
178(5)
7.7 Annihilators that Are Ideals
183(2)
7.8 Completely Integrally Closed Subrings and Self-Injective Rings
185(4)
7.9 Endomorphism-Liftable and tt-Projective Modules
189(1)
7.10 Rings Whose Cyclic Modules are Endomorphism-Extendable
190(7)
8 Automorphism-Lit table Modules
197(11)
8.1 Automorphism-Liftable and Endomorphism-Liftable Modules
197(1)
8.2 Non-Primitive Hereditary Noetherian Prime Rings
198(3)
8.3 Non-Primitive Dedekind Prime Rings
201(1)
8.4 Idempotent-Lifted Modules and k-Projective Modules
202(6)
9 Open Problems
208(7)
References 215(7)
Index 222
Ashish K. Srivastava is Professor of Mathematics at Saint Louis University. He has published more than 40 research papers and co-authored the monograph Cyclic Modules and the Structure of Rings (2012). Askar Tuganbaev is Professor at the National Research University 'Moscow Power Engineering Institute' and Lomonosov Moscow State University. He is the author of 10 monographs, including Arithmetical Rings and Endomorphisms (2019), Rings Close to Regular (2002) and Laurent Series Rings and Related Rings (2020). Pedro A. Guil Asensio is Assistant Professor at the University of Murcia in Spain. He has published more than 60 research papers in noncommutative algebra.