In algebra, a change of rings is an operation of changing a coefficient ring to another.

Constructions edit

Given a ring homomorphism  , there are three ways to change the coefficient ring of a module; namely, for a right R-module M and a right S-module N, one can form

  •  , the induced module, formed by extension of scalars,
  •  , the coinduced module, formed by co-extension of scalars, and
  •  , formed by restriction of scalars.

They are related as adjoint functors:

 

and

 

This is related to Shapiro's lemma.

Operations edit

Restriction of scalars edit

Throughout this section, let   and   be two rings (they may or may not be commutative, or contain an identity), and let   be a homomorphism. Restriction of scalars changes S-modules into R-modules. In algebraic geometry, the term "restriction of scalars" is often used as a synonym for Weil restriction.

Definition edit

Suppose that   is a module over  . Then it can be regarded as a module over   where the action of   is given via

 

where   denotes the action defined by the  -module structure on  .[1]

Interpretation as a functor edit

Restriction of scalars can be viewed as a functor from  -modules to  -modules. An  -homomorphism   automatically becomes an  -homomorphism between the restrictions of   and  . Indeed, if   and  , then

 .

As a functor, restriction of scalars is the right adjoint of the extension of scalars functor.

If   is the ring of integers, then this is just the forgetful functor from modules to abelian groups.

Extension of scalars edit

Extension of scalars changes R-modules into S-modules.

Definition edit

Let   be a homomorphism between two rings, and let   be a module over  . Consider the tensor product  , where   is regarded as a left  -module via  . Since   is also a right module over itself, and the two actions commute, that is   for  ,   (in a more formal language,   is a  -bimodule),   inherits a right action of  . It is given by   for  ,  . This module is said to be obtained from   through extension of scalars.

Informally, extension of scalars is "the tensor product of a ring and a module"; more formally, it is a special case of a tensor product of a bimodule and a module – the tensor product of an R-module with an  -bimodule is an S-module.

Examples edit

One of the simplest examples is complexification, which is extension of scalars from the real numbers to the complex numbers. More generally, given any field extension K < L, one can extend scalars from K to L. In the language of fields, a module over a field is called a vector space, and thus extension of scalars converts a vector space over K to a vector space over L. This can also be done for division algebras, as is done in quaternionification (extension from the reals to the quaternions).

More generally, given a homomorphism from a field or commutative ring R to a ring S, the ring S can be thought of as an associative algebra over R, and thus when one extends scalars on an R-module, the resulting module can be thought of alternatively as an S-module, or as an R-module with an algebra representation of S (as an R-algebra). For example, the result of complexifying a real vector space (R = R, S = C) can be interpreted either as a complex vector space (S-module) or as a real vector space with a linear complex structure (algebra representation of S as an R-module).

Applications edit

This generalization is useful even for the study of fields – notably, many algebraic objects associated to a field are not themselves fields, but are instead rings, such as algebras over a field, as in representation theory. Just as one can extend scalars on vector spaces, one can also extend scalars on group algebras and also on modules over group algebras, i.e., group representations. Particularly useful is relating how irreducible representations change under extension of scalars – for example, the representation of the cyclic group of order 4, given by rotation of the plane by 90°, is an irreducible 2-dimensional real representation, but on extension of scalars to the complex numbers, it split into 2 complex representations of dimension 1. This corresponds to the fact that the characteristic polynomial of this operator,   is irreducible of degree 2 over the reals, but factors into 2 factors of degree 1 over the complex numbers – it has no real eigenvalues, but 2 complex eigenvalues.

Interpretation as a functor edit

Extension of scalars can be interpreted as a functor from  -modules to  -modules. It sends   to  , as above, and an  -homomorphism   to the  -homomorphism   defined by  .

Relation between the extension of scalars and the restriction of scalars edit

Consider an  -module   and an  -module  . Given a homomorphism  , define   to be the composition

 ,

where the last map is  . This   is an  -homomorphism, and hence   is well-defined, and is a homomorphism (of abelian groups).

In case both   and   have an identity, there is an inverse homomorphism  , which is defined as follows. Let  . Then   is the composition

 ,

where the first map is the canonical isomorphism  .

This construction establishes a one to one correspondence between the sets   and  . Actually, this correspondence depends only on the homomorphism  , and so is functorial. In the language of category theory, the extension of scalars functor is left adjoint to the restriction of scalars functor.

See also edit

References edit

  • Dummit, David (2004). Abstract algebra. Foote, Richard M. (3 ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. pp. 359–377. ISBN 0471452343. OCLC 248917264.
  • J. Peter May, Notes on Tor and Ext
  • Nicolas Bourbaki. Algebra I, Chapter II. LINEAR ALGEBRA.§5. Extension of the ring of scalars;§7. Vector spaces. 1974 by Hermann.

Further reading edit

  1. ^ Dummit 2004, p. 359.