One-dimensional rings of finite F-representation type (Q645264)
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English | One-dimensional rings of finite F-representation type |
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One-dimensional rings of finite F-representation type (English)
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8 November 2011
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A ring means a commutative noetherian ring of prime characteristic \(p\). Let \(R\) be a ring and \(M\) a finitely generated \(R\)-module. We denote by \(^e\!M\) the module \(M\) with its \(R\)-module structure pulled back via the \(e\)-times iterated Frobenius map. It is said that \(M\) has finite F-representation type if there exist finitely generated \(R\)-modules \(M_1,\dots,M_s\) such that for every non-negative integer \(e\), \(^e\!M \cong \bigoplus_{i=1}^s M_i^{\oplus n_{e_i}}\) for some non-negative integers \(n_{e_1},\ldots,n_{e_s}\). If a ring \(R\) has finite F-representation type as an \(R\)-module, \(R\) is said to have finite F-representation type. The author proves: Let \(A\) be a one-dimensional complete local domain with residue field \(k\) or a one-dimensional \(\mathbb N\)-graded domain with \(A_0 \cong A/A_+ = k\) being a field. Assume that \(k\) is algebraically closed or finite. Then \(A\) has finite F-representation type. He presents examples of complete local or graded one-dimensional domains which do not have finite F-representation type with perfect residue fields, and also gives some examples of higher dimensional rings of finite F-representation type.
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finite F-representation type
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