Noetherian and totally noetherian rings and modules
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ghazi Omar, FarahEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Departamento
Universidad de Granada. Programa de Doctorado MatemáticasMateria
Anillos (Álgebra) Anillos conmutativos Módulos (Algebra) Álgebra Anillos Noetherianos Módulos noetherianos
Fecha
2024Fecha lectura
2023-11-30Referencia bibliográfica
Ghazi Omar, Farah. Noetherian and totally noetherian rings and modules. Granada: Universidad de Granada, 2023. [https://hdl.handle.net/10481/89002]
Resumen
Given a commutative ring A there are different approaches to understand its structure; one
is consider ideals and their arithmetic (multiplicative theory), and another one is to consider
modules over A (module theory); in this work we shall mix both; on one hand we shall study
ideals; in particular prime ideals, and on the other we shall use categories of modules and
functors between them. Recall that the spectrum of A, endowed with Zariski topology, is
a bridge between Algebra and Geometry. In this approach we shall consider subsets of the
spectrum of A and chain conditions and presheaf constructions on them.
Indeed, given a ring Awe shall consider a subsetK ⊆ Spec(A) closed under generalizations,
and the associated hereditary torsion theory σK , or, more generally we shall consider a hereditary
torsion theory σ on Mod–A, and define chain conditions relative to σ such that we extend the
range of examples we may study. The behaviour of these constructions is acceptable from a
categorical point of view, so we can construct new categories and functors and so on. The
simplest example is provided by a multiplicative set S ⊆ A for which we have the fraction ring
S−1A, and the category of S−1A modules. A general hereditary torsion theory σ has a similar
description whenever A is a σ–noetherian ring; in fact, it is determined by a multiplicative set
of finitely generated ideals rather than principal ones.
In both cases we obtain a categorical framework which is useful for some developments;
however, a more arithmetic approach might be of interest. For instance, an A–module M is
σ–torsion when for each element m ∈ M there exists an ideal hm ∈ L(σ) such that mhm = 0;
a common ideal h ∈ L(σ) should be the best choice to work more effectively; this occurs
when M is finitely generated; that is, if M is σ–torsion and finitely generated, there exists an
ideal h ∈ L(σ) such that Mh = 0.
With this new approach we have three different notions for noetherian module:
• M is noetherian whenever the lattice of all submodules of M is noetherian.
• M is σ–noetherian whenever the lattice of all σ–closed submodules is noetherian, and
the third one for which we have no categorical description is:
• M is totally σ–noetherian whenever for any ascending chain of submodules {Ni | i ∈ I}
there is an ideal h ∈ L(σ), and an element j ∈ I such that Nih ⊆ Nj .
This notion of totally σ–noetherian was introduced by Anderson and Dumitrescu as S–finite
for a multiplicative set S ⊆ A, which coincides with our definition of totally σS–noetherian.
This more arithmetical approach to chain conditions has the advantage of allowing effective
computation, and the disadvantage of losing several categorical and functorial constructions.