Quasitilted extensions of algebras. II. (Q1569814)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Quasitilted extensions of algebras. II. |
scientific article |
Statements
Quasitilted extensions of algebras. II. (English)
0 references
20 September 2000
0 references
The authors continue the investigations of part I [Proc. Am. Math. Soc. 129, No. 5, 1289-1297 (2001; Zbl 0970.16009)]. Main results: Theorem A. Let \(A\) be an indecomposable quasitilted algebra and let \(M\) be a nonzero decomposable \(A\)-module in \(\text{add}({\mathcal L}_A\cap{\mathcal R}_A)\). The following are equivalent: (a) \(A[M]\) is tilted, (b) \(A[M]\) is quasitilted, (c) \(M\) is directing. -- Theorem B. Let \(A\) be an indecomposable quasitilted algebra and let \(M=M_1\oplus M_2\) be an \(A\)-module such that \(0\neq M_1\) is an indecomposable module in \({\mathcal L}_A\setminus{\mathcal R}_A\) and \(0\neq M_2\in\text{add}({\mathcal L}_A\cap{\mathcal R}_A)\). Then the one-point extension \(A[M]\) is quasitilted if and only if the following conditions hold: (a) \(A[M_1]\) is quasitilted; (b) \(M_2\) is a hereditary projective module and \(\Hom(M_2,{\mathcal R}_A\setminus{\mathcal L}_A)=0\); (c) \(M\) is directing. -- Theorem C. Let \(A\) be an indecomposable quasitilted algebra and \(M\) a decomposable \(A\)-module in \(\text{add\,}{\mathcal L}_A\) such that it contains at least two nonzero indecomposable direct summands in \({\mathcal L}_A\setminus{\mathcal R}_A\). The following conditions are equivalent: (a) \(A[M]\) is a quasitilted algebra; (b) \(M\) is a hereditary projective \(A\)-module and \(\Hom_A(M,{\mathcal R}_A\setminus{\mathcal L}_A)=0\); (c) \(M\) is a projective \(A\)-module and \(\Hom_A(M,{\mathcal R}_A\setminus{\mathcal L}_A)=0\).
0 references
tilted algebras
0 references
quasi-tilted algebras
0 references
one-point extensions
0 references
Galois coverings
0 references
indecomposable direct summands
0 references