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nLab bimodule (Rev #38, changes)

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Contents

Idea

A bimodule is a module in two compatible ways over two rings.

Definition

With a left action and a right action

Given two rings RR and SS, a RR-SS-bimodule is an abelian group BB with a bilinear left $R$-action α R:R×BB\alpha_R:R \times B \to B and a bilinear right $S$-action α S:B×SB\alpha_S:B \times S \to B such that for all rRr \in R, bBb \in B, and sSs \in S, α R(r,α S(b,s))=α S(α R(r,b),s)\alpha_R(r, \alpha_S(b, s)) = \alpha_S(\alpha_R(r, b), s).

With a biaction

Equivalently, given two rings RR and SS, a RR-SS-bimodule is an abelian group BB with a trilinear $R$-$S$-biaction, a function ()()():R×B×SB(-)(-)(-):R \times B \times S \to B such that

  • for all bBb \in B, 1 Rb1 S=b1_R b 1_S = b

  • for all bBb \in B, r 1Rr_1 \in R, r 2Rr_2 \in R, s 1Ss_1 \in S, s 2Ss_2 \in S, r 1(r 2,b,s 1)s 2=(r 1 Rr 2)b(s 1 Ss 2)r_1 (r_2, b, s_1) s_2 = (r_1 \cdot_R r_2) b (s_1 \cdot_S s_2)

  • for all r 1Rr_1 \in R, r 2Rr_2 \in R, bBb \in B, sSs \in S, (r 1+r 2)bs=r 1bs+r 2bs(r_1 + r_2) b s = r_1 b s + r_2 b s

  • for all rRr \in R, b 1Bb_1 \in B, b 2Bb_2 \in B, sSs \in S, r(b 1+b 2)s=rb 1s+rb 2sr (b_1 + b_2) s = r b_1 s + r b_2 s

  • for all rRr \in R, bBb \in B, s 1Ss_1 \in S, s 2Ss_2 \in S, rb(s 1+s 2)=rbs 1+rbs 2r b (s_1 + s_2) = r b s_1 + r b s_2

representing simultaneous left multiplication by scalars rRr \in R and right multiplication by scalars sSs \in S.

Properties

Biactions, left actions, and right actions

Let RR and SS be rings, and let BB be a RR-SS-bimodule.

Given a left RR-action α R\alpha_R and a right SS-action α S\alpha_S of a RR-SS-bimodule, the biaction ()()():R×B×SB(-)(-)(-):R \times B \times S \to B is defined as

rbsα R(r,α S(b,s))=α S(α R(r,b),s)r b s \coloneqq \alpha_R(r, \alpha_S(b, s)) = \alpha_S(\alpha_R(r, b), s)

The biaction is trilinear because the left RR-action and right SS-action are bilinear.

On the other hand, given an RR-SS-biaction α\alpha of a RR-SS-bimodule, the left $R$-action is defined from the RR-SS-biaction as

α R(r,b)rb1 S\alpha_R(r, b) \coloneqq r b 1_S

for all rRr \in R and bBb \in B. It is a left action because

α R(1 R,b)=1 Rb1 S=m\alpha_R(1_R, b) = 1_R b 1_S = m
α R(r 1,α L(r 2,b))=r 1(r 2b1 S)1 S=(r 1 Rr 2)b(1 S S1 S)=(r 1 Rr 2)b1 S=α R(r 1 Rr 2,b)\alpha_R(r_1, \alpha_L(r_2, b)) = r_1 (r_2 b 1_S) 1_S = (r_1 \cdot_R r_2) b (1_S \cdot_S 1_S) = (r_1 \cdot_R r_2) b 1_S = \alpha_R(r_1 \cdot_R r_2, b)

The right $S$-action is defined from the RR-SS-biaction as

α S(b,s)1 Rbs\alpha_S(b, s) \coloneqq 1_R b s

for all sSs \in S and bBb \in B. It is a right action because

α S(b,1 S)=1 Rb1 S=m\alpha_S(b, 1_S) = 1_R b 1_S = m
α S(α S(b,s 1),s 2)=1 R(1 R,b,s 1)s 2=(1 R R1 R)b(s 1 Ss 2)=1 Sb(s 1 Ss 2)=α S(b,s 1 Ss 2)\alpha_S(\alpha_S(b, s_1), s_2) = 1_R (1_R, b, s_1) s_2 = (1_R \cdot_R 1_R) b (s_1 \cdot_S s_2) = 1_S b (s_1 \cdot_S s_2) = \alpha_S(b, s_1 \cdot_S s_2)

The left RR-action and right SS-action satisfy the following identity:

  • for all bBb \in B, rRr \in R and sSs \in S, α R(r,α S(b,s))=α S(α R(r,b),s)\alpha_R(r, \alpha_S(b, s)) = \alpha_S(\alpha_R(r, b), s).

This is because when expanded out, the identity becomes:

α(r,α(1 R,b,s),1 S)=α(1 R,α(r,b,1 S),s)\alpha(r, \alpha(1_R, b, s), 1_S) = \alpha(1_R, \alpha(r, b, 1_S), s)
(r R1 R)b(s S1 S)=(1 R Rr)b(1 S Ss)(r \cdot_R 1_R) b (s \cdot_S 1_S) = (1_R \cdot_R r) b (1_S \cdot_S s)
rbs=rbsr b s = r b s

The left RR-action and right SS-action are bilinear because the original biaction is trilinear.

Linear maps

Let RR and SS be rings. A RR-SS-linear map or RR-SS-bimodule homomorphism between two RR-SS-bimodules AA and BB is an abelian group homomorphism f:ABf:A \to B such that for all aAa \in A, rRr \in R, and sSs \in S,

f(ras)=rf(a)sf(r a s) = r f(a) s

A linear map f R:AtoB f:A R to B - isSS-linear map f:ABf:A \to B is monic or an RR-SS-bimodule monomorphism if for every other RR-SS-bimodule CC and RR-SS-linear maps h:CAh:C \to A and k:CAk:C \to A, fh=fkf \circ h = f \circ k implies that h=kh = k.

A sub-RR-SS-bimodule of a RR-SS-bimodule BB is a RR-SS-bimodule AA with a monic linear map i:ABi:A \hookrightarrow B.

A RR-SS-linear map f:ABf:A \to B is invertible or an RR-SS-bimodule isomorphism if there exists a RR-SS-linear map g:BAg:B \to A such that gf=id Ag \circ f = id_A and fg=id Bf \circ g = id_B, where id Aid_A and id Bid_B are the identity linear maps on AA and BB respectively.

Tensor product of bimodules

Given rings RR and SS, the tensor product of RR-SS-bimodules AA and BB is the quotient of the tensor product of abelian groups ABA\otimes B underlying them by the RR-SS-biaction; that is,

A R,SB=AB/(a,rbs)(ras,b) A\otimes_{R,S} B = A\otimes B / (a,r b s) \sim (r a s,b)

Two-sided ideals of a ring

Every ring RR is a RR-RR-bimodule, with the biaction ()()():R×R×RR(-)(-)(-):R \times R \times R \to R defined by the ternary product abcabca b c \coloneqq a \cdot b \cdot c for elements aRa \in R, bRb \in R, cRc \in R.

Given a ring RR, a two-sided ideal of RR is a sub-RR-RR-bimodule of RR.

Rings over a ring

Let RR be a ring. An RR-ring SS is a RR-RR-bimodule with a bilinear function ()():S×SS(-)\cdot(-):S \times S \to S and an element 1S1 \in S such that (S,,1)(S, \cdot, 1) forms a monoid.

Categories of bimodules

The 1-category of bimodules and intertwiners

Definition

Write BModBMod for the category whose

  • objects are triples (R,S,B)(R,S,B) where RR and SS are rings and where BB is an RR-SS-bimodule;

  • morphisms are triples (f,g,ϕ)(f,g, \phi) consisting of two ring homomorphisms f:RRf \colon R \to R' and g:SSg \colon S \to S' and an intertwiner of RR-SS'-bimodules ϕ:BgfB\phi \colon B \cdot g \to f \cdot B'. This we may depict as a

    R B S f ϕ g R B S. \array{ R &\stackrel{B}{\to}& S \\ {}^{\mathllap{f}}\downarrow &\Downarrow_{\phi}& \downarrow^{\mathrlap{g}} \\ R' &\stackrel{B'}{\to}& S' } \,.
Remark

As this notation suggests, BModBMod is naturally the vertical category of a pseudo double category whose horizontal composition is given by tensor product of bimodules.

The 2-category of rings, bimodules, and intertwiners

Consider bimodules over rings.

Proposition

There is a 2-category whose

The composition of 1-morphisms is given by the tensor product of modules over the middle algebra.

Proposition

There is a 2-functor from the above 2-category of rings and bimodules to Cat which

Proposition

This construction has as its image precisely the colimit-preserving functors between categories of modules.

This is the Eilenberg-Watts theorem.

Remark

In the context of higher category theory/higher algebra one may interpret this as says that the 2-category of those 2-modules over the given ring which are equivalent to a category of modules is that of rings, bimodules and intertwiners. See also at 2-ring.

Remark

The 2-category of rings and bimodules is an archtypical example for a 2-category with proarrow equipment, hence for a pseudo double category with niche-fillers. Or in the language of internal (infinity,1)-category-theory: it naturally induces the structure of a simplicial object in the (2,1)-category CatCat

(X 1 0 1X 0)Cat Δ op \left( \cdots \stackrel{\to}{\stackrel{\to}{\to}} X_1 \stackrel{\overset{\partial_1}{\to}}{\underset{\partial_0}{\to}} X_0 \right) \in Cat^{\Delta^{op}}

which satisfies the Segal conditions. Here

X 0=Ring X_0 = Ring

is the category of rings and homomorphisms between them, while

X 1=BMod X_1 = BMod

is the category of def. 1, whose objects are pairs consisting of two rings AA and BB and an AA-BB bimodule NN between them, and whose morphisms are pairs consisting of two ring homomorphisms f:AAf \colon A \to A' and g:BBg \colon B \to B' and an intertwiner N(g)(f)NN \cdot (g) \to (f) \cdot N'.

The (,2)(\infty,2)-category of \infty-algebras and \infty-bimodules

The above has a generalization to (infinity,1)-bimodules. See there for more.

References

The 2-category of bimodules in its incarnation as a 2-category with proarrow equipment appears as example 2.3 in

Bimodules in homotopy theory/higher algebra are discussed in section 4.3 of

For more on that see at (∞,1)-bimodule.

Revision on May 25, 2022 at 18:29:19 by Anonymous See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.