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Hereditary ring

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(Redirected from Semihereditary ring) Ring whose ideals are projective

In mathematics, especially in the area of abstract algebra known as module theory, a ring R is called hereditary if all submodules of projective modules over R are again projective. If this is required only for finitely generated submodules, it is called semihereditary.

For a noncommutative ring R, the terms left hereditary and left semihereditary and their right hand versions are used to distinguish the property on a single side of the ring. To be left (semi-)hereditary, all (finitely generated) submodules of projective left R-modules must be projective, and similarly to be right (semi-)hereditary all (finitely generated) submodules of projective right R-modules must be projective. It is possible for a ring to be left (semi-)hereditary but not right (semi-)hereditary and vice versa.

Equivalent definitions

Examples

  • Semisimple rings are left and right hereditary via the equivalent definitions: all left and right ideals are summands of R, and hence are projective. By a similar token, in a von Neumann regular ring every finitely generated left and right ideal is a direct summand of R, and so von Neumann regular rings are left and right semihereditary.
  • For any nonzero element x in a domain R, R x R {\displaystyle R\cong xR} via the map r x r {\displaystyle r\mapsto xr} . Hence in any domain, a principal right ideal is free, hence projective. This reflects the fact that domains are right Rickart rings. It follows that if R is a right Bézout domain, so that finitely generated right ideals are principal, then R has all finitely generated right ideals projective, and hence R is right semihereditary. Finally if R is assumed to be a principal right ideal domain, then all right ideals are projective, and R is right hereditary.
  • A commutative hereditary integral domain is called a Dedekind domain. A commutative semi-hereditary integral domain is called a Prüfer domain.
  • An important example of a (left) hereditary ring is the path algebra of a quiver. This is a consequence of the existence of the standard resolution (which is of length 1) for modules over a path algebra.
  • The triangular matrix ring [ Z Q 0 Q ] {\displaystyle {\begin{bmatrix}\mathbb {Z} &\mathbb {Q} \\0&\mathbb {Q} \end{bmatrix}}} is right hereditary and left semi-hereditary but not left hereditary.
  • If S is a von Neumann regular ring with an ideal I that is not a direct summand, then the triangular matrix ring [ S / I S / I 0 S ] {\displaystyle {\begin{bmatrix}S/I&S/I\\0&S\end{bmatrix}}} is left semi-hereditary but not right semi-hereditary.

Properties

  • For a left hereditary ring R, every submodule of a free left R-module is isomorphic to a direct sum of left ideals of R and hence is projective.

References

  1. Lam 1999, p. 42
  2. ^ Reiner 2003, pp. 27–29


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