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symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
A bimodule is a module in two compatible ways over two rings.
Given two rings and , a --bimodule is an abelian group with a bilinear left $R$-action and a bilinear right $S$-action such that for all , , and , .
Equivalently, given two rings and , a --bimodule is an abelian group with a trilinear $R$-$S$-biaction, a function such that
for all ,
for all , , , , ,
for all , , , ,
for all , , , ,
for all , , , ,
representing simultaneous left multiplication by scalars and right multiplication by scalars .
Let and be rings, and let be a --bimodule.
Given a left -action and a right -action of a --bimodule, the biaction is defined as
The biaction is trilinear because the left -action and right -action are bilinear.
On the other hand, given an --biaction of a --bimodule, the left $R$-action is defined from the --biaction as
for all and . It is a left action because
The right $S$-action is defined from the --biaction as
for all and . It is a right action because
The left -action and right -action satisfy the following identity:
This is because when expanded out, the identity becomes:
The left -action and right -action are bilinear because the original biaction is trilinear.
Let and be rings. A --linear map or --bimodule homomorphism between two --bimodules and is an abelian group homomorphism such that for all , , and ,
A linear map - is-linear map is monic or an --bimodule monomorphism if for every other --bimodule and --linear maps and , implies that .
A sub---bimodule of a --bimodule is a --bimodule with a monic linear map .
A --linear map is invertible or an --bimodule isomorphism if there exists a --linear map such that and , where and are the identity linear maps on and respectively.
Given rings and , the tensor product of --bimodules and is the quotient of the tensor product of abelian groups underlying them by the --biaction; that is,
Every ring is a --bimodule, with the biaction defined by the ternary product for elements , , .
Given a ring , a two-sided ideal of is a sub---bimodule of .
Let be a ring. An -ring is a --bimodule with a bilinear function and an element such that forms a monoid.
Write for the category whose
objects are triples where and are rings and where is an --bimodule;
morphisms are triples consisting of two ring homomorphisms and and an intertwiner of --bimodules . This we may depict as a
As this notation suggests, is naturally the vertical category of a pseudo double category whose horizontal composition is given by tensor product of bimodules.
Consider bimodules over rings.
There is a 2-category whose
1-morphisms are bimodules;
2-morphisms are intertwiners.
The composition of 1-morphisms is given by the tensor product of modules over the middle algebra.
There is a 2-functor from the above 2-category of rings and bimodules to Cat which
sends an ring to its category of modules ;
sends a --bimodule to the tensor product functor
sends an intertwiner to the evident natural transformation of the above functors.
This construction has as its image precisely the colimit-preserving functors between categories of modules.
This is the Eilenberg-Watts theorem.
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.
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
which satisfies the Segal conditions. Here
is the category of rings and homomorphisms between them, while
is the category of def. 1, whose objects are pairs consisting of two rings and and an - bimodule between them, and whose morphisms are pairs consisting of two ring homomorphisms and and an intertwiner .
The above has a generalization to (infinity,1)-bimodules. See there for more.
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.