Rings and modules which are stable under automorphisms of their injective hulls. (Q376030)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6221930
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Rings and modules which are stable under automorphisms of their injective hulls. |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6221930 |
Statements
Rings and modules which are stable under automorphisms of their injective hulls. (English)
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1 November 2013
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automorphism-invariant modules
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pseudo-injective modules
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quasi-injective modules
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prime self-injective rings
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injective hulls
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0.9284667
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0.91950244
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0.90850705
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0.9015437
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0.89830256
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0.89770544
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0.8955572
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0.8937658
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In this quite interesting paper, the authors study rings and modules which are invariant under automorphisms of their injective hulls. Such rings (modules) are called automorphism-invariant rings (modules).NEWLINENEWLINE The authors' main theorem is that if \(M\) is an automorphism-invariant module then \(M=X+Y\) (direct) for a quasi-injective module \(X\), a square-free module \(Y\) orthogonal to \(X\). Further \(X,Y\) are relatively injective. In the next section, the authors study nonsingular, automorphism-invariant rings. Here they prove that if \(R\) is a right nonsingular, right automorphism-invariant ring then \(R\) is isomorphic to the direct product \(S\times T\) for a right self-injective ring \(S\), a right square-free ring \(T\) and \(T\) has the property that for any prime ideal \(P\) of \(T\) which is not essential (as a right \(T\)-module) in \(T\), the factor ring \(T/P\) is a division ring. From this they deduce that every prime, right nonsingular, right automorphism-invariant ring \(R\) is right self-injective. The authors give an example to show that this result is not true if ``prime'' is replaced by ``semiprime''.NEWLINENEWLINE As corollaries, the authors get affirmative answers to questions posed by Singh and Srivastava and Clark and Huynh. Next, the authors study rings over which every cyclic right \(R\)-module is automorphism-invariant. Finally, the authors prove that an \(R\)-module \(M\) is automorphism-invariant if and only if it is pseudo-injective. Here ``if'' part is proved by Lee and Zhou and the ``only if'' part is the question posed by them.
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