Left global dimensions and inverse polynomial modules (Q1590696): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 05:02, 5 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Left global dimensions and inverse polynomial modules |
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Left global dimensions and inverse polynomial modules (English)
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17 April 2001
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Let, for any ring \(A\), \(\text{l.gl.dim }A\) denote the left global dimension of \(A\). The result \(\text{l.gl.dim }R[x]=(\text{l.gl.dim }R)+1\) is well-known and the classical proof involves the construction of \(M[x]\), where \(M\) is any left \(R\)-module, and using projective dimensions. In this paper, however, inverse polynomial modules and injective dimensions are used to obtain the same result. The two main theorems leading up to this result respectively state that, for a left \(R\)-module \(M\), \(\text{inj.dim}_{R[x]}(M[[x^{-1}]])=\text{inj.dim}_R(M)\) and for left \(R[x]\)-modules \(M\) and \(M[[x^{-1}]]\) there exists a short exact sequence of \(R[x]\)-modules \(0\to M\to M[[x^{-1}]]\to M[[x^{-1}]]\to 0\).
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inverse polynomial modules
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injective modules
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left global dimensions
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injective dimensions
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exact sequences
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