Finitistic dimension and a homological generalization of semi-primary rings
TL;DR: In this article, Kaplansky showed that a commutative ring R is left T-nilpotent if, given any sequence {at} of elements in N, there exists an re such that ai • • • an = 0.
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Abstract: Introduction. If P is a ring and M a left P-module, then homological algebra attaches three dimensions to M, projective, weak, and injective(1)By taking the supremum of one of these dimensions as M ranges over all left P-modules, one obtains one of the left \"global\" dimensions of R. Auslander and Buchsbaum [3] and, subsequently, Serre [14], found it relevant and fruitful, in the study of commutative Noetherian rings, to introduce a \"finitistic global\" dimension defined by restricting the supremum of projective dimensions to finitely generated modules of finite projective dimension. The impressive theory developed by these authors prompted Kaplansky to consider, for general commutative rings, a similar finitistic dimension (waiving the restriction, in the above, to finitely generated modules), and, in a seminar at the University of Chicago (1958), he proved the theorem below, characterizing commutative rings R for which this dimension vanishes. This result is the origin of the present paper. Definition. If N is an ideal in a ring P, we say that N is left T-nilpotent i\"T\" ior transfinite) if, given any sequence {at} of elements in N, there exists an re such that ai • • • an = 0. iRight T-nilpotence requires instead that a„ • • • oi = 0.)
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Citations
On a semiprimary ring
Kwangil Koh
- 01 Jan 1968
TL;DR: The main results of as discussed by the authors are the following theorems: 1) Projective cover is an epimorphism of a projective module onto a regular R-module such that its kernel is small.
3
•Posted Content
When the kernel of a complete hereditary cotorsion pair is the additive closure of a tilting module
TL;DR: In this article, the kernel of a complete hereditary cotorsion pair is the additive closure of a tilting module, and it is shown how to characterize when the little finitistic dimension is finite.
3
A short note on strongly flat covers of acts over monoids
Alex Bailey,James Renshaw +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that strongly flat covers of S-act acts do not always exist, unlike the case for flat S-acts of modules over monoid rings.
Torsions in modules
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the ring R is a right cogenerator if and only if in the ring of endomorphisms of any free R-module, r(ι(J))=J for all finitely generated right ideals J.
3
References
Injective modules over Noetherian rings.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the structure and properties of injective modules, particularly over Noetherian rings, and showed that if a module M has a maximal, injective submodule C (as is the case for left-Noetherian ring), then C contains a carbon-copy of every injective module of M, and MjC has no submodules different from 0.
On regular group rings
Maurice Auslander
- 01 Apr 1957
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that if G is locally finite, then K(G) is regular if and only if K is regular and is uniquely divisible by the order of each element in G.
•Journal Article
Note on the dimension of modules and algebras
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the left dimension (notation: \\. dim a A ), the left injective dimension (I inj. dim aA ), and the left weak dimension (w. gl. aA) of a ring with unit element.
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