When is a self-injective semiperfect ring quasi-Frobenius? (Q1327055)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | When is a self-injective semiperfect ring quasi-Frobenius? |
scientific article |
Statements
When is a self-injective semiperfect ring quasi-Frobenius? (English)
0 references
7 July 1994
0 references
Let \(R\) be a ring. An \(R\)-module is called CS if every submodule is essential in a direct summand. Condition (*) is as follows: every uniform submodule of any projective right \(R\)-module \(M\) is contained in a finitely generated submodule of \(M\). The authors prove that the following statements are equivalent: (i) \(R\) is a QF-ring, (ii) \(R\) is a right self-injective semiperfect ring satisfying (*), (iii) \(R\) is a right continuous semiperfect ring satisfying (*) and \(R_ R^{(n)}\) is CS for each positive integer \(n\), (iv) \(R\) is right quasi-continuous and every projective right \(R\)-module is CS, (v) \(R\) is a right self-injective ring satisfying (*) and \(R\) has ACC on principal right or principal left ideals. One consequence is that every right self-injective right perfect ring is QF if and only if for every right self-injective right perfect ring \(R\), \(R_ R^{(n)}\) is CS.
0 references
ACC on principal right ideals
0 references
direct summand
0 references
uniform submodule
0 references
projective right \(R\)-module
0 references
finitely generated submodule
0 references
QF-ring
0 references
right self-injective semiperfect ring
0 references
right quasi-continuous
0 references
right self- injective ring
0 references
right perfect ring
0 references