Jump to content

Free presentation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

In algebra, a free presentation of a module M over a commutative ring R is an exact sequence of R-modules:

Note the image under g of the standard basis generates M. In particular, if J is finite, then M is a finitely generated module. If I and J are finite sets, then the presentation is called a finite presentation; a module is called finitely presented if it admits a finite presentation.

Since f is a module homomorphism between free modules, it can be visualized as an (infinite) matrix with entries in R and M as its cokernel.

A free presentation always exists: any module is a quotient of a free module: , but then the kernel of g is again a quotient of a free module: . The combination of f and g is a free presentation of M. Now, one can obviously keep "resolving" the kernels in this fashion; the result is called a free resolution. Thus, a free presentation is the early part of the free resolution.

A presentation is useful for computation. For example, since tensoring is right-exact, tensoring the above presentation with a module, say N, gives:

This says that is the cokernel of . If N is also a ring (and hence an R-algebra), then this is the presentation of the N-module ; that is, the presentation extends under base extension.

For left-exact functors, there is for example

PropositionLet F, G be left-exact contravariant functors from the category of modules over a commutative ring R to abelian groups and θ a natural transformation from F to G. If is an isomorphism for each natural number n, then is an isomorphism for any finitely-presented module M.

Proof: Applying F to a finite presentation results in

This can be trivially extended to

The same thing holds for . Now apply the five lemma.

See also

References

  • Eisenbud, David, Commutative Algebra with a View Toward Algebraic Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, 150, Springer-Verlag, 1995, ISBN 0-387-94268-8.