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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, the annihilator of a
subset In mathematics, a Set (mathematics), set ''A'' is a subset of a set ''B'' if all Element (mathematics), elements of ''A'' are also elements of ''B''; ''B'' is then a superset of ''A''. It is possible for ''A'' and ''B'' to be equal; if they a ...
of a module over a ring is the ideal formed by the elements of the ring that give always zero when multiplied by each element of . Over an
integral domain In mathematics, an integral domain is a nonzero commutative ring in which the product of any two nonzero elements is nonzero. Integral domains are generalizations of the ring of integers and provide a natural setting for studying divisibilit ...
, a module that has a nonzero annihilator is a torsion module, and a finitely generated torsion module has a nonzero annihilator. The above definition applies also in the case of noncommutative rings, where the left annihilator of a left module is a left ideal, and the right-annihilator, of a right module is a right ideal.


Definitions

Let ''R'' be a ring, and let ''M'' be a left ''R''- module. Choose a non-empty subset ''S'' of ''M''. The ''annihilator'' of ''S'', denoted Ann''R''(''S''), is the set of all elements ''r'' in ''R'' such that, for all ''s'' in ''S'', . In set notation, :\mathrm_R(S)=\ It is the set of all elements of ''R'' that "annihilate" ''S'' (the elements for which ''S'' is a torsion set). Subsets of right modules may be used as well, after the modification of "" in the definition. The annihilator of a single element ''x'' is usually written Ann''R''(''x'') instead of Ann''R''(). If the ring ''R'' can be understood from the context, the subscript ''R'' can be omitted. Since ''R'' is a module over itself, ''S'' may be taken to be a subset of ''R'' itself, and since ''R'' is both a right and a left ''R''-module, the notation must be modified slightly to indicate the left or right side. Usually \ell.\!\mathrm_R(S)\, and r.\!\mathrm_R(S)\, or some similar subscript scheme are used to distinguish the left and right annihilators, if necessary. If ''M'' is an ''R''-module and , then ''M'' is called a ''faithful module''.


Properties

If ''S'' is a subset of a left ''R''-module ''M'', then Ann(''S'') is a left ideal of ''R''. If ''S'' is a submodule of ''M'', then Ann''R''(''S'') is even a two-sided ideal: (''ac'')''s'' = ''a''(''cs'') = 0, since ''cs'' is another element of ''S''. If ''S'' is a subset of ''M'' and ''N'' is the submodule of ''M'' generated by ''S'', then in general Ann''R''(''N'') is a subset of Ann''R''(''S''), but they are not necessarily equal. If ''R'' is
commutative In mathematics, a binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result. It is a fundamental property of many binary operations, and many mathematical proofs depend on it. Perhaps most familiar as a pr ...
, then the equality holds. ''M'' may be also viewed as an ''R''/Ann''R''(''M'')-module using the action \overlinem:=rm\,. Incidentally, it is not always possible to make an ''R''-module into an ''R''/''I''-module this way, but if the ideal ''I'' is a subset of the annihilator of ''M'', then this action is well-defined. Considered as an ''R''/Ann''R''(''M'')-module, ''M'' is automatically a faithful module.


For commutative rings

Throughout this section, let R be a commutative ring and M a finitely generated R-module.


Relation to support

The support of a module is defined as :\operatornameM = \. Then, when the module is finitely generated, there is the relation :V(\operatorname_R(M)) = \operatornameM, where V(\cdot) is the set of prime ideals containing the subset.


Short exact sequences

Given a short exact sequence of modules, :0 \to M' \to M \to M'' \to 0, the support property :\operatornameM = \operatornameM' \cup \operatornameM'', together with the relation with the annihilator implies :V(\operatorname_R(M)) = V(\operatorname_R(M')) \cup V(\operatorname_R(M'')). More specifically, the relations :\operatorname_R(M') \cap \operatorname_R(M'') \supseteq \operatorname_R(M) \supseteq \operatorname_R(M') \operatorname_R(M''). If the sequence splits then the inequality on the left is always an equality. This holds for arbitrary direct sums of modules, as :\operatorname_R\left( \bigoplus_ M_i \right) = \bigcap_ \operatorname_R(M_i).


Quotient modules and annihilators

Given an ideal I \subseteq R and let M be a finitely generated module, then there is the relation :\text(M/IM) = \operatornameM \cap V(I) on the support. Using the relation to support, this gives the relation with the annihilator :V(\text_R(M/IM)) = V(\text_R(M)) \cap V(I).


Examples


Over the integers

Over \mathbb any finitely generated module is completely classified as the direct sum of its free part with its torsion part from the fundamental theorem of abelian groups. Then the annihilator of a finitely generated module is non-trivial only if it is entirely torsion. This is because :\text_(\mathbb^) = \ = (0) since the only element killing each of the \mathbb is 0. For example, the annihilator of \mathbb/2 \oplus \mathbb/3 is :\text_\mathbb(\mathbb/2 \oplus \mathbb/3) = (6) = (\text(2,3)), the ideal generated by (6). In fact the annihilator of a torsion module :M \cong \bigoplus_^n (\mathbb/a_i)^ is isomorphic to the ideal generated by their least common multiple, (\operatorname(a_1, \ldots, a_n)). This shows the annihilators can be easily be classified over the integers.


Over a commutative ring ''R''

There is a similar computation that can be done for any
finitely presented module In mathematics, a finitely generated module is a module (mathematics), module that has a Finite set, finite Generating set of a module, generating set. A finitely generated module over a Ring (mathematics), ring ''R'' may also be called a finite '' ...
over a commutative ring R. The definition of finite presentedness of M implies there exists an exact sequence, called a presentation, given by :R^ \xrightarrow R^ \to M \to 0 where \phi is in \text_(R). Writing \phi explicitly as a matrix gives it as :\phi = \begin \phi_ & \cdots & \phi_ \\ \vdots & & \vdots \\ \phi_ & \cdots & \phi_ \end; hence M has the direct sum decomposition :M = \bigoplus_^k \frac If each of these ideals is written as :I_i = (\phi_(1), \ldots, \phi_(1)) then the ideal I given by :V(I) = \bigcup^_V(I_i) presents the annihilator.


Over ''k'' 'x'',''y''

Over the commutative ring k ,y/math> for a field k, the annihilator of the module :M = \frac \oplus \frac is given by the ideal :\text_(M) = ((x^2 - y)(y - 3)).


Chain conditions on annihilator ideals

The lattice of ideals of the form \ell.\!\mathrm_R(S) where ''S'' is a subset of ''R'' is a complete lattice when partially ordered by inclusion. There is interest in studying rings for which this lattice (or its right counterpart) satisfies the
ascending chain condition In mathematics, the ascending chain condition (ACC) and descending chain condition (DCC) are finiteness properties satisfied by some algebraic structures, most importantly Ideal (ring theory), ideals in certain commutative rings. These conditions p ...
or descending chain condition. Denote the lattice of left annihilator ideals of ''R'' as \mathcal\, and the lattice of right annihilator ideals of ''R'' as \mathcal\,. It is known that \mathcal\, satisfies the ascending chain condition
if and only if In logic and related fields such as mathematics and philosophy, "if and only if" (often shortened as "iff") is paraphrased by the biconditional, a logical connective between statements. The biconditional is true in two cases, where either bo ...
\mathcal\, satisfies the descending chain condition, and symmetrically \mathcal\, satisfies the ascending chain condition if and only if \mathcal\, satisfies the descending chain condition. If either lattice has either of these chain conditions, then ''R'' has no infinite pairwise orthogonal sets of idempotents. If ''R'' is a ring for which \mathcal\, satisfies the A.C.C. and ''R''''R'' has finite uniform dimension, then ''R'' is called a left Goldie ring.


Category-theoretic description for commutative rings

When ''R'' is commutative and ''M'' is an ''R''-module, we may describe Ann''R''(''M'') as the kernel of the action map determined by the adjunct map of the identity along the Hom-tensor adjunction. More generally, given a bilinear map of modules F\colon M \times N \to P, the annihilator of a subset S \subseteq M is the set of all elements in N that annihilate S: :\operatorname(S) := \ . Conversely, given T \subseteq N, one can define an annihilator as a subset of M. The annihilator gives a Galois connection between subsets of M and N, and the associated closure operator is stronger than the span. In particular: * annihilators are submodules * \operatornameS \leq \operatorname(\operatorname(S)) * \operatorname(\operatorname(\operatorname(S))) = \operatorname(S) An important special case is in the presence of a nondegenerate form on a
vector space In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
, particularly an inner product: then the annihilator associated to the map V \times V \to K is called the orthogonal complement.


Relations to other properties of rings

Given a module ''M'' over a
Noetherian In mathematics, the adjective Noetherian is used to describe objects that satisfy an ascending or descending chain condition on certain kinds of subobjects, meaning that certain ascending or descending sequences of subobjects must have finite leng ...
commutative ring ''R'', a prime ideal of ''R'' that is an annihilator of a nonzero element of ''M'' is called an associated prime of ''M''. *Annihilators are used to define left Rickart rings and Baer rings. *The set of (left) zero divisors ''D''''S'' of ''S'' can be written as ::D_S = \bigcup_. :(Here we allow zero to be a zero divisor.) :In particular ''DR'' is the set of (left) zero divisors of ''R'' taking ''S'' = ''R'' and ''R'' acting on itself as a left ''R''-module. *When ''R'' is commutative and Noetherian, the set D_R is precisely equal to the union of the associated primes of the ''R''-module ''R''.


See also

* Faltings' annihilator theorem * Socle * Support of a module


Notes


References

* * Israel Nathan Herstein (1968) ''Noncommutative Rings'', Carus Mathematical Monographs #15,
Mathematical Association of America The Mathematical Association of America (MAA) is a professional society that focuses on mathematics accessible at the undergraduate level. Members include university A university () is an educational institution, institution of tertiary edu ...
, page 3. * * Richard S. Pierce. ''Associative algebras''. Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Vol. 88, Springer-Verlag, 1982, {{ISBN, 978-0-387-90693-5 Ideals (ring theory) Module theory Ring theory