Generating set of a module
In algebra, a generating set G of a module M over a ring R is a subset of M such that the smallest submodule of M containing G is M itself (the smallest submodule containing G exists; it is the intersection of all submodules containing G). The set G is then said to generate M. For example, when the ring is viewed as a left module over itself, then R is generated by the identity element 1 as a left R-module. If there is a finite generating set, then a module is said to be finitely generated.
A generating set of a module is minimal if no proper subset of the set generares the module. If R is a field, then it is the same thing as a basis. Unless the module is finitely-generated, there may exist no minimal generating set.[1]
The cardinarity of a minimal generating set need not be an invariant of the module; Z is generated as a principal ideal by 1, but it is also generated by, say, a minimal generating set { 2, 3 }. (Consequently one usually considers the infimum of the numbers of the generators of the module.)
Let R be a local ring with maximal ideal m and residue field k and M finitely generated module. Then Nakayama's lemma says that M has a minimal generating set whose cardinarity is . If M is flat, then this minimal generating set is linearly independent (so M is free). See also: minimal resolution.
See also
References
- Dummit, David; Foote, Richard. Abstract Algebra.