In
abstract algebra
In mathematics, more specifically algebra, abstract algebra or modern algebra is the study of algebraic structures. Algebraic structures include groups, rings, fields, modules, vector spaces, lattices, and algebras over a field. The te ...
, a module is called a uniform module if the intersection of any two nonzero submodules is nonzero. This is equivalent to saying that every nonzero submodule of ''M'' is an
essential submodule In mathematics, specifically module theory, given a ring ''R'' and an ''R''- module ''M'' with a submodule ''N'', the module ''M'' is said to be an essential extension of ''N'' (or ''N'' is said to be an essential submodule or large submodule of ' ...
. A ring may be called a right (left) uniform ring if it is uniform as a right (left) module over itself.
Alfred Goldie used the notion of uniform modules to construct a measure of
dimension
In physics and mathematics, the dimension of a mathematical space (or object) is informally defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify any point within it. Thus, a line has a dimension of one (1D) because only one coor ...
for modules, now known as the uniform dimension (or Goldie dimension) of a module. Uniform dimension generalizes some, but not all, aspects of the notion of the
dimension of a vector space. Finite uniform dimension was a key assumption for several theorems by Goldie, including
Goldie's theorem, which characterizes which rings are
right order
Rights are legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement; that is, rights are the fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention, or ethical th ...
s in a
semisimple ring. Modules of finite uniform dimension generalize both
Artinian modules and
Noetherian modules.
In the literature, uniform dimension is also referred to as simply the dimension of a module or the rank of a module. Uniform dimension should not be confused with the related notion, also due to Goldie, of the
reduced rank
Reduction, reduced, or reduce may refer to:
Science and technology Chemistry
* Reduction (chemistry), part of a reduction-oxidation (redox) reaction in which atoms have their oxidation state changed.
** Organic redox reaction, a redox reacti ...
of a module.
Properties and examples of uniform modules
Being a uniform module is not usually preserved by direct products or quotient modules. The direct sum of two nonzero uniform modules always contains two submodules with intersection zero, namely the two original summand modules. If ''N''
1 and ''N''
2 are proper submodules of a uniform module ''M'' and neither submodule contains the other, then
fails to be uniform, as
:
Uniserial modules are uniform, and uniform modules are necessarily directly indecomposable. Any commutative domain is a uniform ring, since if ''a'' and ''b'' are nonzero elements of two ideals, then the product ''ab'' is a nonzero element in the intersection of the ideals.
Uniform dimension of a module
The following theorem makes it possible to define a dimension on modules using uniform submodules. It is a module version of a vector space theorem:
Theorem: If ''U''
i and ''V''
j are members of a finite collection of uniform submodules of a module ''M'' such that
and
are both
essential submodule In mathematics, specifically module theory, given a ring ''R'' and an ''R''- module ''M'' with a submodule ''N'', the module ''M'' is said to be an essential extension of ''N'' (or ''N'' is said to be an essential submodule or large submodule of ' ...
s of ''M'', then ''n'' = ''m''.
The uniform dimension of a module ''M'', denoted u.dim(''M''), is defined to be ''n'' if there exists a finite set of uniform submodules ''U''
i such that
is an essential submodule of ''M''. The preceding theorem ensures that this ''n'' is well defined. If no such finite set of submodules exists, then u.dim(''M'') is defined to be ∞. When speaking of the uniform dimension of a ring, it is necessary to specify whether u.dim(''R''
''R'') or rather u.dim(
''R''''R'') is being measured. It is possible to have two different uniform dimensions on the opposite sides of a ring.
If ''N'' is a submodule of ''M'', then u.dim(''N'') ≤ u.dim(''M'') with equality exactly when ''N'' is an essential submodule of ''M''. In particular, ''M'' and its
injective hull ''E''(''M'') always have the same uniform dimension. It is also true that u.dim(''M'') = ''n'' if and only if ''E''(''M'') is a direct sum of ''n'' indecomposable
injective module
In mathematics, especially in the area of abstract algebra known as module theory, an injective module is a module ''Q'' that shares certain desirable properties with the Z-module Q of all rational numbers. Specifically, if ''Q'' is a submodule ...
s.
It can be shown that u.dim(''M'') = ∞ if and only if ''M'' contains an infinite direct sum of nonzero submodules. Thus if ''M'' is either Noetherian or Artinian, ''M'' has finite uniform dimension. If ''M'' has finite
composition length In abstract algebra, a composition series provides a way to break up an algebraic structure, such as a group or a module, into simple pieces. The need for considering composition series in the context of modules arises from the fact that many natur ...
''k'', then u.dim(''M'') ≤ k with equality exactly when ''M'' is a
semisimple module.
A standard result is that a right Noetherian domain is a right
Ore domain. In fact, we can recover this result from another theorem attributed to Goldie, which states that the following three conditions are equivalent for a domain ''D'':
*''D'' is right Ore
*u.dim(''D''
''D'') = 1
*u.dim(''D''
''D'') < ∞
Hollow modules and co-uniform dimension
The
dual
Dual or Duals may refer to:
Paired/two things
* Dual (mathematics), a notion of paired concepts that mirror one another
** Dual (category theory), a formalization of mathematical duality
*** see more cases in :Duality theories
* Dual (grammatical ...
notion of a uniform module is that of a hollow module: a module ''M'' is said to be hollow if, when ''N''
1 and ''N''
2 are submodules of ''M'' such that
, then either ''N''
1 = ''M'' or ''N''
2 = ''M''. Equivalently, one could also say that every proper submodule of ''M'' is a
superfluous submodule.
These modules also admit an analogue of uniform dimension, called co-uniform dimension, corank, hollow dimension or dual Goldie dimension. Studies of hollow modules and co-uniform dimension were conducted in , , , and . The reader is cautioned that Fleury explored distinct ways of dualizing Goldie dimension. Varadarajan, Takeuchi and Reiter's versions of hollow dimension are arguably the more natural ones. Grzeszczuk and Puczylowski in gave a definition of uniform dimension for modular lattices such that the hollow dimension of a module was the uniform dimension of its dual lattice of submodules.
It is always the case that a
finitely cogenerated module has finite uniform dimension. This raises the question: does a
finitely generated module have finite hollow dimension? The answer turns out to be no: it was shown in that if a module ''M'' has finite hollow dimension, then ''M''/''J''(''M'') is a
semisimple,
Artinian module. There are many rings with unity for which ''R''/''J''(''R'') is not semisimple Artinian, and given such a ring ''R'', ''R'' itself is finitely generated but has infinite hollow dimension.
Sarath and Varadarajan showed later, that ''M''/''J''(''M'') being semisimple Artinian is also sufficient for ''M'' to have finite hollow dimension provided ''J''(''M'') is a superfluous submodule of ''M''.
[The same result can be found in and ] This shows that the rings ''R'' with finite hollow dimension either as a left or right ''R''-module are precisely the
semilocal rings.
An additional corollary of Varadarajan's result is that ''R''
''R'' has finite hollow dimension exactly when
''R''''R'' does. This contrasts the finite uniform dimension case, since it is known a ring can have finite uniform dimension on one side and infinite uniform dimension on the other.
Textbooks
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Primary sources
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*{{citation
, author=Varadarajan, K.
, title=Dual Goldie dimension
, journal=Comm. Algebra
, volume=7
, year=1979
, number=6
, pages=565–610
, issn=0092-7872
, mr=524269
, doi=10.1080/00927877908822364
Module theory
Ring theory