On hereditary rings and Noetherian V -rings
1982; Mathematical Sciences Publishers; Volume: 103; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2140/pjm.1982.103.467
ISSN1945-5844
Autores Tópico(s)Algebraic structures and combinatorial models
ResumoThe purpose of this paper is to examine conditions under which (1) a left noetherian left F-ring is left hereditary and (2) a left noetherian left F-ring is a two sided noetherian F-ring.For (1), left noetherian left F-rings which satisfy the restricted left minimum (RLM) condition are examined.The RLM condition is shown to be equivalent to E(R)IR a semisimple left ϋJ-module.Consequently, hereditary is equivalent to E(R)!R semisimple in the two sided case.Two sided noetherian F-rings which are critically nice are also examined.In this case, hereditary is shown to be equivalent to E{R)IR injective and smooth.For (2), a theorem of Faith's concerning left QJ-domains is extended to left noetherian left F-rings.l Introduction and definitions* A ring R is called a left V-ring provided every simple left i?-module is injective.The definition of F-ring is due to Villamayor who has shown that a ring is a left F-ring if and only if every left ideal is the intersection of maximal left ideals.Consequently, all left F-rings are semiprime.Kaplansky has shown that a commutative ring is a F-ring if and only if it is regular.It follows that every commutative noetherian F-ring is semisimple artinian.Cozzens [4] showed that this result does not extend to the noncommutative case by producing an example of a nonartinian, two sided hereditary noetherian F-domain over which all cyclic modules are semisimple or free.This condition on cyclics forces every quasi-injective module to be injective.A ring with all its quasi-injective left iϋ-modules injective will be called a left Ql-ring.According to Boyle [1], a left ζ)/-ring is left noetherian.Note that since a simple module is quasi-injective, a left Ql-ring is a left F-ring.As with Cozzens' example, all the known examples of left QJ-rings are left hereditary.Cozzens and Johnson [5] produced examples of two sided noetherian F-rings which Boyle and Goodearl [3] demonstrated to be neither hereditary nor QI.Also, there is no known example of a one sided noetherian F-ring or QJ-ring.In this paper, we will consider the problem of determining when a left noetherian left F-ring is left hereditary and when a left F-ring is a right F-ring.Throughout, all rings will be associative with identity, all Rmodules will be unitary left jβ-modules and maps between modules will be JS-homomorphisms.If N is a submodule of a module M 9
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