Matrix ring


In abstract algebra, a matrix ring is a set of matrices with entries in a ring R that form a ring under matrix addition and matrix multiplication. The set of all matrices with entries in R is a matrix ring denoted Mn. Some sets of infinite matrices form infinite matrix rings. A subring of a matrix ring is again a matrix ring. Over a rng, one can form matrix rngs.
When R is a commutative ring, the matrix ring Mn is an associative algebra over R, and may be called a matrix algebra. In this setting, if M is a matrix and r is in R, then the matrix rM is the matrix M with each of its entries multiplied by r.

Examples

Structure

  • The matrix ring Mn can be identified with the ring of endomorphisms of the free right R-module of rank n; that is,. Matrix multiplication corresponds to composition of endomorphisms.
  • The ring Mn over a division ring D is an Artinian simple ring, a special type of semisimple ring. The rings and are not simple and not Artinian if the set I is infinite, but they are still full linear rings.
  • The Artin–Wedderburn theorem states that every semisimple ring is isomorphic to a finite direct product, for some nonnegative integer r, positive integers ni, and division rings Di.
  • When we view Mn as the ring of linear endomorphisms of Cn, those matrices which vanish on a given subspace V form a left ideal. Conversely, for a given left ideal I of Mn the intersection of null spaces of all matrices in I gives a subspace of Cn. Under this construction, the left ideals of Mn are in bijection with the subspaces of Cn.
  • There is a bijection between the two-sided ideals of Mn and the two-sided ideals of R. Namely, for each ideal I of R, the set of all matrices with entries in I is an ideal of Mn, and each ideal of Mn arises in this way. This implies that Mn is simple if and only if R is simple. For, not every left ideal or right ideal of Mn arises by the previous construction from a left ideal or a right ideal in R. For example, the set of matrices whose columns with indices 2 through n are all zero forms a left ideal in Mn.
  • The previous ideal correspondence actually arises from the fact that the rings R and Mn are Morita equivalent. Roughly speaking, this means that the category of left R-modules and the category of left Mn-modules are very similar. Because of this, there is a natural bijective correspondence between the isomorphism classes of left R-modules and left Mn-modules, and between the isomorphism classes of left ideals of R and left ideals of Mn. Identical statements hold for right modules and right ideals. Through Morita equivalence, Mn inherits any Morita-invariant properties of R, such as being simple, Artinian, Noetherian, prime.

Properties

  • If S is a subring of R, then Mn is a subring of Mn. For example, Mn is a subring of Mn.
  • The matrix ring Mn is commutative if and only if,, or R is commutative and. In fact, this is true also for the subring of upper triangular matrices. Here is an example showing two upper triangular matrices that do not commute, assuming in R:
  • ::
  • : and
  • ::
  • For, the matrix ring Mn over a nonzero ring has zero divisors and nilpotent elements; the same holds for the ring of upper triangular matrices. An example in matrices would be
  • ::
  • The center of Mn consists of the scalar multiples of the identity matrix, In, in which the scalar belongs to the center of R.
  • The unit group of Mn, consisting of the invertible matrices under multiplication, is denoted GLn.
  • If F is a field, then for any two matrices A and B in Mn, the equality implies. This is not true for every ring R though. A ring R whose matrix rings all have the mentioned property is known as a stably finite ring.

Matrix semiring

In fact, R needs to be only a semiring for Mn to be defined. In this case, Mn is a semiring, called the matrix semiring. Similarly, if R is a commutative semiring, then Mn is a .
For example, if R is the Boolean semiring, then Mn is the semiring of binary relations on an n-element set with union as addition, composition of relations as multiplication, the empty relation as the zero, and the identity relation as the unity.