Modules Over A Pid
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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, in the field of abstract algebra, the structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain is a generalization of the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups and roughly states that finitely generated modules over a
principal ideal domain In mathematics, a principal ideal domain, or PID, is an integral domain in which every ideal is principal, i.e., can be generated by a single element. More generally, a principal ideal ring is a nonzero commutative ring whose ideals are principal, ...
(PID) can be uniquely decomposed in much the same way that integers have a
prime factorization In number theory, integer factorization is the decomposition of a composite number into a product of smaller integers. If these factors are further restricted to prime numbers, the process is called prime factorization. When the numbers are suf ...
. The result provides a simple framework to understand various canonical form results for square matrices over fields.


Statement

When a vector space over a field ''F'' has a finite generating set, then one may extract from it a basis consisting of a finite number ''n'' of vectors, and the space is therefore
isomorphic In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word is ...
to ''F''''n''. The corresponding statement with the ''F'' generalized to a
principal ideal domain In mathematics, a principal ideal domain, or PID, is an integral domain in which every ideal is principal, i.e., can be generated by a single element. More generally, a principal ideal ring is a nonzero commutative ring whose ideals are principal, ...
''R'' is no longer true, since a basis for a finitely generated module over ''R'' might not exist. However such a module is still isomorphic to a quotient of some module ''Rn'' with ''n'' finite (to see this it suffices to construct the morphism that sends the elements of the canonical basis of ''Rn'' to the generators of the module, and take the quotient by its kernel.) By changing the choice of generating set, one can in fact describe the module as the quotient of some ''Rn'' by a particularly simple submodule, and this is the structure theorem. The structure theorem for finitely generated modules over a principal ideal domain usually appears in the following two forms.


Invariant factor decomposition

For every finitely generated module over a principal ideal domain , there is a unique decreasing sequence of proper
ideals Ideal may refer to: Philosophy * Ideal (ethics), values that one actively pursues as goals * Platonic ideal, a philosophical idea of trueness of form, associated with Plato Mathematics * Ideal (ring theory), special subsets of a ring considered ...
(d_1)\supseteq(d_2)\supseteq\cdots\supseteq(d_n) such that is isomorphic to the
sum Sum most commonly means the total of two or more numbers added together; see addition. Sum can also refer to: Mathematics * Sum (category theory), the generic concept of summation in mathematics * Sum, the result of summation, the additio ...
of cyclic modules: :M\cong\bigoplus_i R/(d_i) = R/(d_1)\oplus R/(d_2)\oplus\cdots\oplus R/(d_n). The generators d_i of the ideals are unique up to multiplication by a unit, and are called invariant factors of ''M''. Since the ideals should be proper, these factors must not themselves be invertible (this avoids trivial factors in the sum), and the inclusion of the ideals means one has divisibility d_1\,, \,d_2\,, \,\cdots\,, \,d_n. The free part is visible in the part of the decomposition corresponding to factors d_i = 0. Such factors, if any, occur at the end of the sequence. While the direct sum is uniquely determined by , the isomorphism giving the decomposition itself is ''not unique'' in general. For instance if is actually a field, then all occurring ideals must be zero, and one obtains the decomposition of a finite dimensional vector space into a direct sum of one-dimensional subspaces; the number of such factors is fixed, namely the dimension of the space, but there is a lot of freedom for choosing the subspaces themselves (if ). The nonzero d_i elements, together with the number of d_i which are zero, form a complete set of invariants for the module. Explicitly, this means that any two modules sharing the same set of invariants are necessarily isomorphic. Some prefer to write the free part of ''M'' separately: :R^f \oplus \bigoplus_i R/(d_i) = R^f \oplus R/(d_1)\oplus R/(d_2)\oplus\cdots\oplus R/(d_) where the visible d_i are nonzero, and ''f'' is the number of d_i's in the original sequence which are 0.


Primary decomposition

:Every finitely generated module ''M'' over a principal ideal domain ''R'' is isomorphic to one of the form ::\bigoplus_i R/(q_i) :where (q_i) \neq R and the (q_i) are primary ideals. The q_i are unique (up to multiplication by units). The elements q_i are called the ''elementary divisors'' of ''M''. In a PID, nonzero primary ideals are powers of primes, and so (q_i)=(p_i^) = (p_i)^. When q_i=0, the resulting indecomposable module is R itself, and this is inside the part of ''M'' that is a free module. The summands R/(q_i) are
indecomposable Indecomposability or indecomposable may refer to any of several subjects in mathematics: * Indecomposable module, in algebra * Indecomposable distribution, in probability * Indecomposable continuum, in topology * Indecomposability (intuitionist ...
, so the primary decomposition is a decomposition into indecomposable modules, and thus every finitely generated module over a PID is a completely decomposable module. Since PID's are Noetherian rings, this can be seen as a manifestation of the
Lasker-Noether theorem In mathematics, the Lasker–Noether theorem states that every Noetherian ring is a Lasker ring, which means that every ideal can be decomposed as an intersection, called primary decomposition, of finitely many '' primary ideals'' (which are relat ...
. As before, it is possible to write the free part (where q_i=0) separately and express ''M'' as: :R^f \oplus(\bigoplus_i R/(q_i)) where the visible q_i are nonzero.


Proofs

One proof proceeds as follows: * Every finitely generated module over a PID is also finitely presented because a PID is Noetherian, an even stronger condition than
coherence Coherence, coherency, or coherent may refer to the following: Physics * Coherence (physics), an ideal property of waves that enables stationary (i.e. temporally and spatially constant) interference * Coherence (units of measurement), a deriv ...
. * Take a presentation, which is a map R^r \to R^g (relations to generators), and put it in Smith normal form. This yields the invariant factor decomposition, and the diagonal entries of Smith normal form are the invariant factors. Another outline of a proof: * Denote by ''tM'' the torsion submodule of ''M''. Then ''M''/''tM'' is a finitely generated torsion free module, and such a module over a commutative PID is a
free module In mathematics, a free module is a module that has a basis – that is, a generating set consisting of linearly independent elements. Every vector space is a free module, but, if the ring of the coefficients is not a division ring (not a field in t ...
of finite rank, so it is isomorphic to R^n for a positive integer ''n''. This free module can be embedded as a submodule ''F'' of ''M'', such that the embedding splits (is a right inverse of) the projection map; it suffices to lift each of the generators of ''F'' into ''M''. As a consequence M= tM\oplus F. * For a
prime element In mathematics, specifically in abstract algebra, a prime element of a commutative ring is an object satisfying certain properties similar to the prime numbers in the integers and to irreducible polynomials. Care should be taken to distinguish pri ...
''p'' in ''R'' we can then speak of N_p= \. This is a submodule of ''tM'', and it turns out that each ''N''''p'' is a direct sum of cyclic modules, and that ''tM'' is a direct sum of ''N''''p'' for a finite number of distinct primes ''p''. * Putting the previous two steps together, ''M'' is decomposed into cyclic modules of the indicated types.


Corollaries

This includes the classification of finite-dimensional vector spaces as a special case, where R = K. Since fields have no non-trivial ideals, every finitely generated vector space is free. Taking R=\mathbb yields the fundamental theorem of finitely generated abelian groups. Let ''T'' be a linear operator on a finite-dimensional vector space ''V'' over ''K''. Taking R = K /math>, the algebra of polynomials with coefficients in ''K'' evaluated at ''T'', yields structure information about ''T''. ''V'' can be viewed as a finitely generated module over K /math>. The last invariant factor is the minimal polynomial, and the product of invariant factors is the
characteristic polynomial In linear algebra, the characteristic polynomial of a square matrix is a polynomial which is invariant under matrix similarity and has the eigenvalues as roots. It has the determinant and the trace of the matrix among its coefficients. The chara ...
. Combined with a standard matrix form for K p(T), this yields various canonical forms: * invariant factors + companion matrix yields
Frobenius normal form In linear algebra, the Frobenius normal form or rational canonical form of a square matrix ''A'' with entries in a field ''F'' is a canonical form for matrices obtained by conjugation by invertible matrices over ''F''. The form reflects a minimal ...
(aka, rational canonical form) * primary decomposition + companion matrix yields
primary rational canonical form In linear algebra, the Frobenius normal form or rational canonical form of a square matrix ''A'' with entries in a field ''F'' is a canonical form for matrices obtained by conjugation by invertible matrices over ''F''. The form reflects a minimal d ...
* primary decomposition + Jordan blocks yields Jordan canonical form (this latter only holds over an
algebraically closed field In mathematics, a field is algebraically closed if every non-constant polynomial in (the univariate polynomial ring with coefficients in ) has a root in . Examples As an example, the field of real numbers is not algebraically closed, because ...
)


Uniqueness

While the invariants (rank, invariant factors, and elementary divisors) are unique, the isomorphism between ''M'' and its canonical form is not unique, and does not even preserve the
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
decomposition. This follows because there are non-trivial
automorphism In mathematics, an automorphism is an isomorphism from a mathematical object to itself. It is, in some sense, a symmetry of the object, and a way of mapping the object to itself while preserving all of its structure. The set of all automorphisms ...
s of these modules which do not preserve the summands. However, one has a canonical torsion submodule ''T'', and similar canonical submodules corresponding to each (distinct) invariant factor, which yield a canonical sequence: :0 < \cdots < T < M. Compare composition series in Jordan–Hölder theorem. For instance, if M \approx \mathbf \oplus \mathbf/2, and (1,\bar), (0,\bar) is one basis, then (1,\bar), (0,\bar) is another basis, and the change of basis matrix \begin1&0\\1&1\end does not preserve the summand \mathbf. However, it does preserve the \mathbf/2 summand, as this is the torsion submodule (equivalently here, the 2-torsion elements).


Generalizations


Groups

The Jordan–Hölder theorem is a more general result for finite groups (or modules over an arbitrary ring). In this generality, one obtains a composition series, rather than a
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
. The Krull–Schmidt theorem and related results give conditions under which a module has something like a primary decomposition, a decomposition as a direct sum of indecomposable modules in which the summands are unique up to order.


Primary decomposition

The primary decomposition generalizes to finitely generated modules over commutative Noetherian rings, and this result is called the Lasker–Noether theorem.


Indecomposable modules

By contrast, unique decomposition into ''indecomposable'' submodules does not generalize as far, and the failure is measured by the ideal class group, which vanishes for PIDs. For rings that are not principal ideal domains, unique decomposition need not even hold for modules over a ring generated by two elements. For the ring ''R'' = Z ˆšâˆ’5 both the module ''R'' and its submodule ''M'' generated by 2 and 1 + âˆšâˆ’5 are indecomposable. While ''R'' is not isomorphic to ''M'', ''R'' âŠ• ''R'' is isomorphic to ''M'' âŠ• ''M''; thus the images of the ''M'' summands give indecomposable submodules ''L''1, ''L''2 < ''R'' âŠ• ''R'' which give a different decomposition of ''R'' âŠ• ''R''. The failure of uniquely factorizing ''R'' âŠ• ''R'' into a direct sum of indecomposable modules is directly related (via the ideal class group) to the failure of the unique factorization of elements of ''R'' into irreducible elements of ''R''. However, over a Dedekind domain the ideal class group is the only obstruction, and the structure theorem generalizes to finitely generated modules over a Dedekind domain with minor modifications. There is still a unique torsion part, with a torsionfree complement (unique up to isomorphism), but a torsionfree module over a Dedekind domain is no longer necessarily free. Torsionfree modules over a Dedekind domain are determined (up to isomorphism) by rank and
Steinitz class In abstract algebra, a Dedekind domain or Dedekind ring, named after Richard Dedekind, is an integral domain in which every nonzero proper ideal factors into a product of prime ideals. It can be shown that such a factorization is then necessarily ...
(which takes value in the ideal class group), and the decomposition into a direct sum of copies of ''R'' (rank one free modules) is replaced by a direct sum into rank one
projective module In mathematics, particularly in algebra, the class of projective modules enlarges the class of free modules (that is, modules with basis vectors) over a ring, by keeping some of the main properties of free modules. Various equivalent characterizati ...
s: the individual summands are not uniquely determined, but the Steinitz class (of the sum) is.


Non-finitely generated modules

Similarly for modules that are not finitely generated, one cannot expect such a nice decomposition: even the number of factors may vary. There are Z-submodules of Q4 which are simultaneously direct sums of two indecomposable modules and direct sums of three indecomposable modules, showing the analogue of the primary decomposition cannot hold for infinitely generated modules, even over the integers, Z. Another issue that arises with non-finitely generated modules is that there are torsion-free modules which are not free. For instance, consider the ring Z of integers. Then Q is a torsion-free Z-module which is not free. Another classical example of such a module is the Baer–Specker group, the group of all sequences of integers under termwise addition. In general, the question of which infinitely generated torsion-free abelian groups are free depends on which
large cardinal In the mathematical field of set theory, a large cardinal property is a certain kind of property of transfinite cardinal numbers. Cardinals with such properties are, as the name suggests, generally very "large" (for example, bigger than the least Î ...
s exist. A consequence is that any structure theorem for infinitely generated modules depends on a choice of set theory axioms and may be invalid under a different choice.


References

* * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Structure Theorem For Finitely Generated Modules Over A Principal Ideal Domain Theorems in abstract algebra Module theory de:Hauptidealring#Moduln über Hauptidealringen