When is every linear transformation a sum of two commuting invertible ones?
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Publication:2435563
DOI10.1016/j.laa.2013.09.038zbMath1305.15011OpenAlexW2066340516MaRDI QIDQ2435563
Publication date: 19 February 2014
Published in: Linear Algebra and its Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.laa.2013.09.038
unitslinear transformationsemisimple module2-sum propertystrong 2-sum propertystrongly \(\pi\)-regular endomorphism
Factorization of matrices (15A23) Linear transformations, semilinear transformations (15A04) Units, groups of units (associative rings and algebras) (16U60)
Related Items (6)
Additive Representations of Elements in Rings: A Survey ⋮ An embedding theorem on triangular matrix rings ⋮ Every \(2n\)-by-\(2n\) complex matrix is a sum of three symplectic matrices ⋮ Rings with fine nilpotents ⋮ When every endomorphism of a Σ-injective module is a sum of two commuting automorphisms ⋮ Quasi-clean rings and strongly quasi-clean rings
Cites Work
- A survey of rings generated by units.
- Sums of automorphisms of free modules and completely decomposable groups.
- Additive unit representations in rings over global fields -- A survey
- 2-GOOD RINGS
- On injective and surjective endomorphisms of finitely generated modules
- Strongly clean rings and fitting's lemma
- An Ideal-Theoretic Characterization of the Ring of All Linear Transformations
- Every Linear Transformation is a Sum of Nonsingular Ones
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