Covers, precovers, and purity. (Q733346): Difference between revisions
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English | Covers, precovers, and purity. |
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Covers, precovers, and purity. (English)
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15 October 2009
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A class \(\mathbb{F}\) of modules is (pre)covering if each module \(M\) has an \(\mathbb{F}\)-(pre)cover \(F\to M\) (\(F\in\mathbb{F}\)). If a class \(\mathbb{F}\) is closed under pure quotient modules, then the following conditions are equivalent: (i) \(\mathbb{F}\) is closed under set indexed direct sums; (ii) \(\mathbb{F}\) is precovering; (iii) \(\mathbb{F}\) is covering. The pair of classes \((\mathbb{F},\mathbb{G})\) is called cotorsion pair if \(\mathbb{F}^\perp=\mathbb{G}\) and \(\mathbb{F}={^\perp\mathbb{G}}\), where \(\mathbb{F}^\perp=\text{Ker\,Ext}^1(\mathbb{F},-)\), \(^\perp\mathbb{G}=\text{Ker\,Ext}^1(-,\mathbb{G})\). If a class \(\mathbb{F}\) contains the ground ring \(R\) and is closed under extensions, set indexed direct sums, pure submodules and pure quotient modules, then \((\mathbb{F},\mathbb{F}^\perp)\) is a perfect cotorsion pair (in particular, \(\mathbb{F}\) is covering and \(\mathbb{F}^\perp\) is enveloping). As applications some concrete classes of modules are considered: the kernels of homological functors, the torsion free classes for torsion pairs.
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purities
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classes of modules
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pure quotient modules
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cotorsion pairs
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covering classes
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precovering classes
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