scholarly journals A characterization of Artinian rings whose endomorphism rings have finite global dimension

1988 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Zacharia
2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (06) ◽  
pp. 1950112
Author(s):  
René Marczinzik

In [A. Skowronski, S. Smalø and D. Zacharia, On the finiteness of the global dimension for Artinian rings, J. Algebra 251(1) (2002) 475–478], the authors proved that an Artin algebra [Formula: see text] with infinite global dimension has an indecomposable module with infinite projective and infinite injective dimension, giving a new characterization of algebras with finite global dimension. We prove in this paper that an Artin algebra [Formula: see text] that is not Gorenstein has an indecomposable [Formula: see text]-module with infinite Gorenstein projective dimension and infinite Gorenstein injective dimension, which gives a new characterization of algebras with finite Gorenstein dimension. We show that this gives a proper generalization of the result in [A. Skowronski, S. Smalø and D. Zacharia, On the finiteness of the global dimension for Artinian rings, J. Algebra 251(1) (2002) 475–478] for Artin algebras.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (738) ◽  
pp. 149-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osamu Iyama ◽  
Michael Wemyss

Abstract In this paper we define and study triangulated categories in which the Hom-spaces have Krull dimension at most one over some base ring (hence they have a natural 2-step filtration), and each factor of the filtration satisfies some Calabi–Yau type property. If \mathcal{C} is such a category, we say that \mathcal{C} is Calabi–Yau with \dim\mathcal{C}\leq 1 . We extend the notion of Calabi–Yau reduction to this setting, and prove general results which are an analogue of known results in cluster theory. Such categories appear naturally in the setting of Gorenstein singularities in dimension three as the stable categories \mathop{\underline{\textup{CM}}}R of Cohen–Macaulay modules. We explain the connection between Calabi–Yau reduction of \mathop{\underline{\textup{CM}}}R and both partial crepant resolutions and \mathbb{Q} -factorial terminalizations of \operatorname{Spec}R , and we show under quite general assumptions that Calabi–Yau reductions exist. In the remainder of the paper we focus on complete local cA_{n} singularities R. By using a purely algebraic argument based on Calabi–Yau reduction of \mathop{\underline{\textup{CM}}}R , we give a complete classification of maximal modifying modules in terms of the symmetric group, generalizing and strengthening results in [I. Burban, O. Iyama, B. Keller and I. Reiten, Cluster tilting for one-dimensional hypersurface singularities, Adv. Math. 217 2008, 6, 2443–2484], [H. Dao and C. Huneke, Vanishing of Ext, cluster tilting and finite global dimension of endomorphism rings, Amer. J. Math. 135 2013, 2, 561–578], where we do not need any restriction on the ground field. We also describe the mutation of modifying modules at an arbitrary (not necessarily indecomposable) direct summand. As a corollary when k=\mathbb{C} we obtain many autoequivalences of the derived category of the \mathbb{Q} -factorial terminalizations of \operatorname{Spec}R .


1985 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Burgess ◽  
K. R. Fuller ◽  
E. R. Voss ◽  
B. Zimmermann-Huisgen

2007 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 332-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham J. Leuschke

AbstractFor a commutative local ring R, consider (noncommutative) R-algebras Λ of the form Λ = EndR(M) where M is a reflexive R-module with nonzero free direct summand. Such algebras Λ of finite global dimension can be viewed as potential substitutes for, or analogues of, a resolution of singularities of Spec R. For example, Van den Bergh has shown that a three-dimensional Gorenstein normal ℂ-algebra with isolated terminal singularities has a crepant resolution of singularities if and only if it has such an algebra Λ with finite global dimension and which is maximal Cohen–Macaulay over R (a “noncommutative crepant resolution of singularities”). We produce algebras Λ = EndR(M) having finite global dimension in two contexts: when R is a reduced one-dimensional complete local ring, or when R is a Cohen–Macaulay local ring of finite Cohen–Macaulay type. If in the latter case R is Gorenstein, then the construction gives a noncommutative crepant resolution of singularities in the sense of Van den Bergh.


1998 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Burgess ◽  
K. R. Fuller

The Cartan determinant conjecture for left artinian rings was verified for quasihereditary rings showing detC(R) = detC(R/I), where I is a protective ideal generated by a primitive idempotent. This article identifies classes of rings generalizing the quasihereditary ones, first by relaxing the “projective” condition on heredity ideals. These rings, called left k-hereditary are all of finite global dimension. Next a class of rings is defined which includes left serial rings of finite global dimension, quasihereditary and left 1-hereditary rings, but also rings of infinite global dimension. For such rings, the Cartan determinant conjecture is true, as is its converse. This is shown by matrix reduction. Examples compare and contrast these rings with other known families and a recipe is given for constructing them.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (04) ◽  
pp. 673-682
Author(s):  
Bo Hou ◽  
Shilin Yang

Let Λ be a finite-dimensional superalgebra over a field K. A characterization of an elementary superalgebra Λ is given by a quiver and a weight function. It is shown that Λ is elementary if and only if its Hochschild extension is elementary. Furthermore, if Λ is elementary of finite global dimension and {e1, …, en} is a complete set of gr-primitive orthogonal idempotents of Λ, then the following equalities hold: [Formula: see text] where ΦΛ is the Coxeter matrix of Λ, tr is the trace function of a matrix, HHi(Λ) and HHi(Λ) are the i-th Hochschild homology and cohomology, respectively.


1987 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 351-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. D. Burgess

The Cartan matrix C of a left artinian ring A, with indecomposable projectives P1,…,Pn and corresponding simples Si=Pi/JPi, is an n×n integral matrix with entries Cij, the number of copies of the simple sj which appear as composition factors of Pi. A relationship between the invertibility of this matrix (as an integral matrix) and the finiteness of the global dimension has long been known: gl dim A < ∞⇒det C = ± 1 (Eilenberg [3]). More recently Zacharia [9] has shown that gl dim A ≦ 2⇒det C = 1, and in fact no rings of finite global dimension are known with det C = −1. The converse, det C = l⇒gl dim A < ∞, is false, as easy examples show ([[1) or [3]). However if A is left serial, gl dim A < ∞iff det C = l [1]. If A = ⊕n ≧ 0 An is ℤ-graded and the radical J = ⊕n ≧ 0 An, Wilson [8] calls such rings positively graded. Here there is a graded Cartan matrix with entries from ℤ[X] and gl dim A < ∞⇒det = 1 and, hence, det C = l [8, Prop. 2.2].


1998 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zygmunt Pogorzały

Throughout the paper K denotes a fixed algebraically closed field. All algebras considered are finite-dimensional associative K-algebras with a unit element. Moreover, they are assumed to be basic and connected. For an algebra A we denote by mod(A) the category of all finitely generated right A-modules, and mod(A) denotes the stable category of mod(A), i.e. mod(A)/℘ where ℘ is the two-sided ideal in mod(A) of all morphisms that factorize through projective A-modules. Two algebras A and B are said to be stably equivalent if the stable categories mod(A) and mod(B) are equivalent. The study of stable equivalences of algebras has its sources in modular representation theory of finite groups. It is of importance in this theory whether two stably equivalent algebras have the same number of pairwise non-isomorphic nonprojective simple modules. Another motivation for studying stable equivalences appears in the following context. If E is a K-algebra of finite global dimension then its derived category Db(E) is equivalent to the stable category mod(Ê) of the repetitive category Ê of E [15]. Thus the problem of a classification of derived equivalent algebras leads in many cases to a classification of stably equivalent selfinjective algebras.


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