Quasi-Frobenius ring
In mathematics, especially ring theory, the class of Frobenius rings and their generalizations are the extension of work done on Frobenius algebras. Perhaps the most important generalization is that of quasi-Frobenius rings, which are in turn generalized by right pseudo-Frobenius rings and right finitely pseudo-Frobenius rings. Other diverse generalizations of quasi-Frobenius rings include QF-1, QF-2 and QF-3 rings.
These types of rings can be viewed as descendants of algebras examined by Georg Frobenius. A partial list of pioneers in quasi-Frobenius rings includes R. Brauer, K. Morita, T. Nakayama, C. J. Nesbitt, and R. M. Thrall.
Definitions
A ring R is quasi-Frobenius if and only if R satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:- R is Noetherian on one side and self-injective on one side.
- R is Artinian on a side and self-injective on a side.
- All right R modules which are projective are also injective.
- All right R modules which are injective are also projective.
- R is quasi-Frobenius and the socle as right R modules.
- R is quasi-Frobenius and as left R modules.
- As right R modules, and as left R modules.
- R is Frobenius
- R is quasi-Frobenius
- R is a finite direct sum of local artinian rings which have unique minimal ideals.
- Every faithful right R module is a generator for the category of right R modules.
- R is right self-injective and is a cogenerator of Mod-R.
- R is right self-injective and is finitely cogenerated as a right R module.
- R is right self-injective and a right Kasch ring.
- R is right self-injective, semilocal and the socle soc is an essential submodule of R.
- R is a cogenerator of Mod-R and is a left Kasch ring.
Thrall's QF-1,2,3 generalizations
In the seminal article, R. M. Thrall focused on three specific properties of QF algebras and studied them in isolation. With additional assumptions, these definitions can also be used to generalize QF rings. A few other mathematicians pioneering these generalizations included K. Morita and H. Tachikawa.Following, let R be a left or right Artinian ring:
- R is QF-1 if all faithful left modules and faithful right modules are balanced modules.
- R is QF-2 if each indecomposable projective right module and each indecomposable projective left module has a unique minimal submodule.
- R is QF-3 if the injective hulls E and E are both projective modules.
Examples
- Every Frobenius k algebra is a Frobenius ring.
- Every semisimple ring is quasi-Frobenius, since all modules are projective and injective. Even more is true however: semisimple rings are all Frobenius. This is easily verified by the definition, since for semisimple rings and J = rad = 0.
- The quotient ring is QF for any positive integer n>1.
- Commutative Artinian serial rings are all Frobenius, and in fact have the additional property that every quotient ring R/''I'' is also Frobenius. It turns out that among commutative Artinian rings, the serial rings are exactly the rings whose quotients are all Frobenius.
- Many exotic PF and FPF rings can be found as examples in