Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Notations and conventions
- Remarks on the development of the area
- Section summaries
- Chapter 1 Some preliminaries
- Chapter 2 Positive primitive formulas and the sets they define
- Chapter 3 Stability and totally transcendental modules
- Chapter 4 Hulls
- Chapter 5 Forking and ranks
- Chapter 6 Stability-theoretic properties of types
- Chapter 7 Superstable modules
- Chapter 8 The lattice of pp-types and free realisations of pp-types
- Chapter 9 Types and the structure of pure-injective modules
- Chapter 10 Dimension and decomposition
- Chapter 11 Modules over artinian rings
- Chapter 12 Functor categories
- Chapter 13 Modules over Artin algebras
- Chapter 14 Projective and flat modules
- Chapter 15 Torsion and torsionfree classes
- Chapter 16 Elimination of quantifiers
- Chapter 17 Decidability and undecidability
- Problems page
- Bibliography
- Examples index
- Notation index
- Index
Chapter 4 - Hulls
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Notations and conventions
- Remarks on the development of the area
- Section summaries
- Chapter 1 Some preliminaries
- Chapter 2 Positive primitive formulas and the sets they define
- Chapter 3 Stability and totally transcendental modules
- Chapter 4 Hulls
- Chapter 5 Forking and ranks
- Chapter 6 Stability-theoretic properties of types
- Chapter 7 Superstable modules
- Chapter 8 The lattice of pp-types and free realisations of pp-types
- Chapter 9 Types and the structure of pure-injective modules
- Chapter 10 Dimension and decomposition
- Chapter 11 Modules over artinian rings
- Chapter 12 Functor categories
- Chapter 13 Modules over Artin algebras
- Chapter 14 Projective and flat modules
- Chapter 15 Torsion and torsionfree classes
- Chapter 16 Elimination of quantifiers
- Chapter 17 Decidability and undecidability
- Problems page
- Bibliography
- Examples index
- Notation index
- Index
Summary
It was shown in the last chapter that every totally transcendental module is a direct sum of indecomposable submodules. The proof of this was short – in a sense too short, since it tells us little about the indecomposable factors which occur. For instance, if a is an element of the totally transcendental module M and if N is a minimal direct summand of M containing a, then what is the relationship between N and a? Is N uniquely determined by a? Does N depend on a or just on the pp-type of a? These questions will be answered in this chapter.
In section 1 it is shown that, given any pure-injective module M and any element (or subset) of M, there is a minimal direct summand of M containing the element (or subset). We will call this the hull, N(A), of the element or subset A and the terminology is justified by showing that this hull is unique up to isomorphism over A. Furthermore, it is shown that the hull of A depends only on the pp-type of A.
The terminology is reminiscent of that for injective hulls: indeed, the above hulls can be seen as injective hulls in an appropriate (functor) category. I don't, however, take that approach to them, preferring to work on a more “concrete” level. The injective hull of a module A is characterised by the fact that every element in it is “linked” in a non-trivial way to A by an atomic relation (equation). There is an analogy for hulls: every element of the hull of A is linked in a non-trivial way to A by a pp-relation.
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- Information
- Model Theory and Modules , pp. 67 - 108Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988