Category of modules
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In algebra, given a ring R {\displaystyle R}, the category of left modules over R {\displaystyle R} is the category whose objects are all left modules over R {\displaystyle R} and whose morphisms are all module homomorphisms between left R {\displaystyle R}-modules. For example, when R {\displaystyle R} is the ring of integers Z {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} }, it is the same thing as the category of abelian groups. The category of right modules is defined in a similar way.
One can also define the category of bimodules over a ring R {\displaystyle R} but that category is equivalent to the category of left (or right) modules over the enveloping algebra of R {\displaystyle R} (or over the opposite of that).
Note: Some authors use the term module category for the category of modules. This term can be ambiguous since it could also refer to a category with a monoidal-category action.
Properties
The categories of left and right modules are abelian categories. These categories have enough projectives and enough injectives. Mitchell's embedding theorem states every abelian category arises as a full subcategory of the category of modules over some ring.
Projective limits and inductive limits exist in the categories of left and right modules.
Over a commutative ring, together with the tensor product of modules ⊗ {\displaystyle \otimes }, the category of modules is a symmetric monoidal category.
Objects
A monoid object of the category of modules over a commutative ring R {\displaystyle R} is exactly an associative algebra over R {\displaystyle R}.
A compact object in R {\displaystyle R}-M o d {\displaystyle \mathbf {Mod} } is exactly a finitely presented module.
Category of vector spaces
The category K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} } (some authors use V e c t K {\displaystyle \mathbf {Vect} _{K}}) has all vector spaces over a field K {\displaystyle K} as objects, and K {\displaystyle K}-linear maps as morphisms. Since vector spaces over K {\displaystyle K} (as a field) are the same thing as modules over the ring K {\displaystyle K}, K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} } is a special case of R {\displaystyle R}-M o d {\displaystyle \mathbf {Mod} } (some authors use M o d R {\displaystyle \mathbf {Mod} _{R}}), the category of left R {\displaystyle R}-modules.
Much of linear algebra concerns the description of K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} }. For example, the dimension theorem for vector spaces says that the isomorphism classes in K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} } correspond exactly to the cardinal numbers, and that K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} } is equivalent to the subcategory of K - V e c t {\displaystyle K{\text{-}}\mathbf {Vect} } which has as its objects the vector spaces K n {\displaystyle K_{n}}, where n {\displaystyle n} is any cardinal number.
Generalizations
The category of sheaves of modules over a ringed space also has enough injectives (though not always enough projectives).
See also
- Algebraic K-theory (the important invariant of the category of modules.)
- Category of rings
- Derived category
- Module spectrum
- Category of graded vector spaces
- Category of representations
- Change of rings
- Morita equivalence
- Stable module category
- Eilenberg–Watts theorem
Bibliography
- Bourbaki. "Algèbre linéaire". Algèbre.
- Dummit, David; Foote, Richard. Abstract Algebra.
- Mac Lane, Saunders (September 1998). Categories for the Working Mathematician. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 5 (second ed.). Springer. ISBN 0-387-98403-8. Zbl .
External links
- at the nLab