Rings whose cyclic modules are direct sums of extending modules. (Q2902681)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6069864
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Rings whose cyclic modules are direct sums of extending modules. |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6069864 |
Statements
22 August 2012
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cyclic modules
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extending modules
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direct sums
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CS modules
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cyclic subfactors
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finite Goldie dimension
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quasi-injective modules
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Rings whose cyclic modules are direct sums of extending modules. (English)
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This paper studies rings each of whose cyclic modules is a direct sum of CS (also known as extending) modules. The origin of this tradition can be drawn back to the celebrated characterization due to \textit{B. L. Osofsky} of semisimple rings as those rings for which each cyclic right module is injective [Pac. J. Math. 14, 645-650 (1964; Zbl 0145.26601)]. Osofsky's result was extended by \textit{B. L. Osofsky} and \textit{P. F. Smith} [J. Algebra 139, No. 2, 342-354 (1991; Zbl 0737.16001)] who proved that a cyclic module whose cyclic subfactors are CS has finite Goldie dimension.NEWLINENEWLINE The authors of the paper under review show that a cyclic module with every cyclic subfactor a direct sum of CS modules has finite Goldie dimension. Among other things, the paper also studies structure of rings whose cyclic modules are direct sums of CS or quasi-injective modules.
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