The abelian closure of an exact category

2020 ◽  
Vol 224 (10) ◽  
pp. 106395
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Rump
Keyword(s):  
2013 ◽  
Vol 212 ◽  
pp. 87-96
Author(s):  
Henning Krause ◽  
Greg Stevenson

AbstractFor an exact category having enough projective objects, we establish a bijection between thick subcategories containing the projective objects and thick subcategories of the stable derived category. Using this bijection, we classify thick subcategories of finitely generated modules over strict local complete intersections and produce generators for the category of coherent sheaves on a separated Noetherian scheme with an ample family of line bundles.


Author(s):  
A. Carboni ◽  
R. Celia Magno

AbstractWe give an explicit one step description of the free (Barr) exact category on a left exact one. As an application we give a new two step construction of the free abelian category on an additive one.


Author(s):  
A. Madanshekaf

It is shown, among other things, that the category of hypermodules is an exact category, thus generalizing the classical case.


1990 ◽  
Vol 135 (2) ◽  
pp. 388-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amnon Neeman

1987 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 1174-1209 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Jardine

Products, and closely associated questions of infinite loop space structure, have always been a source of trouble in higher algebraicK-theory. From the first description of the product in terms of the plus construction, up to the current tendency to let the infinite loop space machines do it, the constructions have never been completely explicit, and many mistakes have resulted.Since Waldhausen introduced the doubleQ-construction [16], there has been the tantalizing prospect of an infinite loop space structure for the nerveof theQ-constructionof an exact category, which would be understandable to the man on the street, and which also would be well-behaved with respect to products induced by biexact pairings. Gillet [3] showed that most of these conditions could be met with his introduction of the multipleQ-construction. Shimakawa [14] filled in some of the details later.


2018 ◽  
Vol 70 (2) ◽  
pp. 487-507
Author(s):  
Toshinori Kobayashi ◽  
Ryo Takahashi

Abstract Let R be a Cohen–Macaulay local ring. In this paper, we study the structure of Ulrich R-modules mainly in the case where R has minimal multiplicity. We explore generation of Ulrich R-modules and clarify when the Ulrich R-modules are precisely the syzygies of maximal Cohen–Macaulay R-modules. We also investigate the structure of Ulrich R-modules as an exact category.


Author(s):  
Eugenia Ellis ◽  
Rafael Parra

Let [Formula: see text] be a strong [Formula: see text]-coherent ring such that each finitely [Formula: see text]-presented [Formula: see text]-module has finite projective dimension. We consider [Formula: see text] the full subcategory of [Formula: see text]-Mod of finitely [Formula: see text]-presented modules. We prove that [Formula: see text] is an exact category, [Formula: see text] for every [Formula: see text] and we obtain an expression of [Formula: see text].


Author(s):  
Pavel Etingof ◽  
Victor Ostrik

AbstractWe develop a theory of Frobenius functors for symmetric tensor categories (STC) {\mathcal{C}} over a field {\boldsymbol{k}} of characteristic p, and give its applications to classification of such categories. Namely, we define a twisted-linear symmetric monoidal functor {F:\mathcal{C}\to\mathcal{C}\boxtimes{\rm Ver}_{p}}, where {{\rm Ver}_{p}} is the Verlinde category (the semisimplification of {\mathop{\mathrm{Rep}}\nolimits_{\mathbf{k}}(\mathbb{Z}/p)}); a similar construction of the underlying additive functor appeared independently in [K. Coulembier, Tannakian categories in positive characteristic, preprint 2019]. This generalizes the usual Frobenius twist functor in modular representation theory and also the one defined in [V. Ostrik, On symmetric fusion categories in positive characteristic, Selecta Math. (N.S.) 26 2020, 3, Paper No. 36], where it is used to show that if {\mathcal{C}} is finite and semisimple, then it admits a fiber functor to {{\rm Ver}_{p}}. The main new feature is that when {\mathcal{C}} is not semisimple, F need not be left or right exact, and in fact this lack of exactness is the main obstruction to the existence of a fiber functor {\mathcal{C}\to{\rm Ver}_{p}}. We show, however, that there is a 6-periodic long exact sequence which is a replacement for the exactness of F, and use it to show that for categories with finitely many simple objects F does not increase the Frobenius–Perron dimension. We also define the notion of a Frobenius exact category, which is a STC on which F is exact, and define the canonical maximal Frobenius exact subcategory {\mathcal{C}_{\rm ex}} inside any STC {\mathcal{C}} with finitely many simple objects. Namely, this is the subcategory of all objects whose Frobenius–Perron dimension is preserved by F. One of our main results is that a finite STC is Frobenius exact if and only if it admits a (necessarily unique) fiber functor to {{\rm Ver}_{p}}. This is the strongest currently available characteristic p version of Deligne’s theorem (stating that a STC of moderate growth in characteristic zero is the representation category of a supergroup). We also show that a sufficiently large power of F lands in {\mathcal{C}_{\rm ex}}. Also, in characteristic 2 we introduce a slightly weaker notion of an almost Frobenius exact category (namely, one having a fiber functor into the category of representations of the triangular Hopf algebra {\boldsymbol{k}[d]/d^{2}} with d primitive and R-matrix {R=1\otimes 1+d\otimes d}), and show that a STC with Chevalley property is (almost) Frobenius exact. Finally, as a by-product, we resolve Question 2.15 of [P. Etingof and S. Gelaki, Exact sequences of tensor categories with respect to a module category, Adv. Math. 308 2017, 1187–1208].


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document