Questions tagged [noncommutative-algebra]

For questions about rings which are not necessarily commutative and modules over such rings.

In abstract algebra, the theory of rings which are not necessarily commutative is called "noncommutative algebra." In this way it is a generalization of commutative algebra. Some results from commutative algebra hold in noncommutative algebra, but many results break down.

The ring of quaternions was among the first motivating examples of noncommutative rings. Other familiar examples include the $n\times n$ matrix ring over any ring ($n>1$).

A few examples of some differences between commutative and noncommutative algebra:

  • If $R$ is a commutative ring, and $R^n\cong R^m$ as $R$ modules for some positive integers $m$ and $n$, then $m=n$. In contrast, there is a noncommutative ring such that $R^m\cong R^n$ for every pair of positive integers $m,n$.

  • Any commutative ring without zero divisors can be embedded in a field. There are examples of noncommutative rings without zero divisors which cannot be embedded into a division ring. This is one of many signs that show localization does not work well for many noncommutative rings.

  • The module $R_R$ may have different properties from the module $_RR$. For one thing, one could be Noetherian (or Artinian) without the other having the same property.

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Is the product of artinian rings again artinian

Let $R_1,R_2$ be two (left) artinian rings (not necessarily commutative), is $R_1\times R_2$ necessarily artinian ? I also have another related question that came to my head while thinking about the first one. If $R_1,R_2$ both have a finite number…
moora
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Show that the Weyl algebra A1 over a field F of characteristic zero is not isomorphic to Mn(E) for any integer n and field E F.

I have tried to solve it like this: let F be a vector field of characteristic 0 an A1=F[T,D], T,D are from EndF[ω] over F. D is differential operator and T(f(ω))=ωf(ω).In A1 algebra [T,D]=I. I is identity operator. I must show that φ:A1→Mn(E), F⊆E…
XYZ
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What is the $k$ action on the Clifford algebra $C(V,q)$?

Let $k$ be a field. I know that Clifford algebra $C(V,q)$ is central simple $k$-algebra where $\dim V$ is $2n$ and $q$ is non degenerate. But what does it mean $k$-algebra here? What is the $k$ action on $C(V,q)$? Is it $a\otimes w$ for $a \in k$…
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$F\{x,y\}/(xy-yx-x)$ is primitive

Let $F$ be a field of characteristic $0$ and $F\{x,y\}$ denote the free algebra over $F$ generated by $x,y$. Then show that $R=F\{x,y\}/(xy-yx-x)$ is primitive. I tried to use the usual trick that to embed $R$ inside the endomorphism ring of an…
Bingo
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Aside from Matrix Multiplication, when else is multiplication not commutative?

Nearly all of my experience with math is in the "applied math" realm, so I haven't had any formal study of rings, or other fundamental algebraic concepts that help to prove all the relevant applied math. I saw answers like this one talking about…
Mike Williamson
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Prove that map between modules is isomorphic.

Let $R$ be a ring and $M$ and $R$-module. Let $M$ be finitely presented, i.e it is finitely generated with the surjective function $p: R^n \to M$ and $\ker(p)$ is also finitely generated. Consider the right $R$-module $\text{Hom}_R(M,R)$ and for an…
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Detailed example of a skew field different from Hamilton quaternion

Do you have a reference of a detailed construction of a skew field different from the quaternions from Hamilton? I would appreciate if that would be accessible from the Internet.
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A corollary of Koethe's theorem

A homework problem is divided into 2 parts: I managed to solve the first part, which states: Prove Koethe's theorem: If $D$ is a finite dimensional central division $k$-algebra and $K_0 \subset D$ is a separable extension of $k$ then $D$ has a…
Amy
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If $Rx$ is nil then $Rxr$ is nil for any $r \in R$

i am studying kothe's conjecture, ad got stuck here. if $R$ is any non commutative ring, then how is it true that if the ideal $Rx$ is nil then $Rxr$ is nil for any $r \in R$. let $sx\in Rx$, then $(sx)^n=0$ for some $n$, but how is $sxr$ …
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doubt in example of left primitive ring.

According to Lam, let k be any division ring, V be a right k-vector space, and E=End(V), operating on the left of V. then it says clearly V is faithful simple left E module, so E is left primitive ring. My problem is with V being simple E-Module, as…
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A normal regular element in a connected graded ring $S$ can become central by a suitable Zhang twist

I am reading the article Noncommutative quadric surfaces (here) by S. Paul Smith and M. Van den Bergh. There is a sentence in the introduction to the article: $S$ is a not-necessarily-commutative connected graded ring, $z\in S_2$ is a central…
Well
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How to determine if a non-commutative algebra is semisimple

Let $\cal{Q}$ be the field of rationals and $L=\cal{Q}(\sqrt 2, \sqrt 3)$ be a Galois extension of degree 4 ($[L:\cal{Q}]=4$). Using theory of Drinfeld twists on the galois group of $L$, I have produced a noncommutative algebra $(\cal{Q}(\sqrt 2,…
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Definition of a basic algebra over a field $K$

Let $K$ be an algebraically closed field and let $A$ be a $K$-algebra with a complete set $\{e_1,…,e_n\}$ of primitive orthogonal idempotents. So, the algebra $A$ is called basic if $$e_iA \cong e_jA \implies e_i=e_j.$$ (In this context $\cong$…
Mario
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What is the correct name for a “product function” on a monoid?

Let $W$ be a monoid. A function $f\colon W\rightarrow W$ is a "product function" if $f(w)$ is a product of constants in $W$ and positive integer powers of $w$. It could also be called a "non-commutative arithmetic sequence". I'd like to use the…
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right ideal of Lipschitz quaternions

What exactly are the right ideals of $L=H(\mathbb Z)=\{\,a+bi+cj+dk;\quad a,b,c,d \in \mathbb Z\}$ (the Lipschitz quaternions)? we can see here Ideal class "group" of Lipschitz (fully-integer) quaternions These are $(\alpha)$ , $(\alpha,…
leila
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