Ihre E-Mail wurde erfolgreich gesendet. Bitte prüfen Sie Ihren Maileingang.

Leider ist ein Fehler beim E-Mail-Versand aufgetreten. Bitte versuchen Sie es erneut.

Vorgang fortführen?

Exportieren
Filter
Medientyp
Sprache
Region
Erscheinungszeitraum
Zugriff
  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Cham : Springer International Publishing | Cham : Springer
    UID:
    b3kat_BV049527764
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (X, 533 p. 20 illus., 10 illus. in color)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed. 2024
    ISBN: 9783031500626
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-031-50061-9
    Weitere Ausg.: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-031-50063-3
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 2
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    almahu_9949657671202882
    Umfang: X, 533 p. 20 illus., 10 illus. in color. , online resource.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed. 2024.
    ISBN: 9783031500626
    Inhalt: This textbook provides an introduction to fundamental concepts of algebra at upper undergraduate to graduate level, covering the theory of rings, fields and modules, as well as the representation theory of finite groups. Throughout the book, the exposition relies on universal constructions, making systematic use of quotients and category theory - whose language is introduced in the first chapter. The book is divided into four parts. Parts I and II cover foundations of rings and modules, field theory and generalities on finite group representations, insisting on rings of polynomials and their ideals. Part III culminates in the structure theory of finitely generated modules over Dedekind domains and its applications to abelian groups, linear maps, and foundations of algebraic number theory. Part IV is an extensive study of linear representations of finite groups over fields of characteristic zero, including graded representations and graded characters as well as a final chapter on the Drinfeld-Lusztig double of a group algebra, appearing for the first time in a textbook at this level. Based on over twenty years of teaching various aspects of algebra, mainly at the École Normale Supérieure (Paris) and at Peking University, the book reflects the audiences of the author's courses. In particular, foundations of abstract algebra, like linear algebra and elementary group theory, are assumed of the reader. Each of the of four parts can be used for a course - with a little ad hoc complement on the language of categories. Thanks to its rich choice of topics, the book can also serve students as a reference throughout their studies, from undergraduate to advanced graduate level.
    Anmerkung: 1 Prerequisites and Preliminaries -- Part I Rings and Modules -- 2 Rings, Polynomials, Divisibility -- 3 Polynomial Rings in Several Indeterminates -- 4 More on Modules -- 5 On Representations of Finite Groups -- Part II Integral Domains, Polynomials, Fields -- 6 Prime and Maximal Ideals, Integral Domains -- 7 Fields, Division Rings -- Part III Finitely Generated Modules -- 8 Integrality, Noetherianity -- 9 Finitely Generated Projective Modules -- 10 Finitely Generated Modules Over Dedekind Domains -- 11 Complement on Dedekind Domains -- Part IV Characteristic Zero Linear Representations of Finite Groups -- 12 Monoidal Categories: An Introduction -- 13 Characteristic 0 Representations -- 14 Playing With the Base Field -- 15 Induction and Restriction: Some Applications to Finite Groups -- 16 Brauer's Theorem and Some Applications -- 17 Graded Representations and Characters -- 18 The Drinfeld-Lusztig Double of a Group Algebra.
    In: Springer Nature eBook
    Weitere Ausg.: Printed edition: ISBN 9783031500619
    Weitere Ausg.: Printed edition: ISBN 9783031500633
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
  • 3
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Cham, Switzerland :Springer, Springer Nature Switzerland AG,
    UID:
    edoccha_9961418160602883
    Umfang: 1 online resource (528 pages)
    Ausgabe: First edition.
    ISBN: 3-031-50062-8
    Anmerkung: Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Chapter 1 Prerequisites and Preliminaries -- 1.1 Prerequisites -- 1.1.1 Groups: -components of elements -- 1.1.2 Nilpotent groups -- 1.1.3 Complements on Sylow subgroups -- 1.1.4 Solvability and the Schur-Zassenhaus Theorem -- 1.2 Preliminary: the Language of Categories -- 1.2.1 What is a category? -- 1.2.2 First examples -- 1.2.3 Monomorphisms, epimorphisms -- 1.2.4 Functors -- 1.2.5 Examples -- 1.2.6 Yet another example: presheaves -- 1.2.7 Faithful and full functors -- 1.2.8 Morphisms of functors -- 1.2.9 Isomorphisms of functors -- 1.2.10 Morphisms of functors: Yoneda's Lemma -- 1.2.11 Universals -- 1.2.12 Adjoint functors and adjunctions -- 1.2.13 Equivalences of categories -- 1.2.14 Complements: Going on and on -- 1.2.15 Horizontal composition -- Part I Rings and Modules -- Chapter 2 Rings, Polynomials, Divisibility -- 2.1 Rings, Morphisms, Modules -- 2.1.1 Morphisms -- 2.1.2 Subrings -- 2.1.3 Endomorphisms of abelian groups and modules -- 2.2 Polynomials and Power Series -- 2.2.1 Generalities -- 2.2.2 Infinite sums and products -- 2.2.3 Derivatives -- 2.2.4 Logarithm and exponential -- Definition 2.2.14 -- Proposition 2.2.15 -- Proposition 2.2.16 -- Remark 2.2.17 -- 2.2.5 Euclidean division -- Proposition 2.2.18 (Euclidean division by a monic polynomial) -- Remarks 2.2.19 -- Corollary 2.2.20 -- Corollary 2.2.21 -- Exercise 2.2.22 -- Remark 2.2.23 -- Theorem 2.2.24 (Cayley-Hamilton) -- Lemma 2.2.25 -- Exercise 2.2.26 -- 2.3 Canonical Morphisms -- 2.3.1 Prime ring and characteristic -- 2.3.2 Universal property of the polynomial ring -- 2.4 Ideals -- 2.4.1 Left, right, two-sided ideals -- 2.4.2 Ideals and morphisms -- 2.4.3 Chinese Remainder Theorem -- 2.5 Factorial Domains, Principal Ideal Domains, Euclidean Domains -- 2.5.1 Divisors and irreducible elements -- 2.5.2 Factorial domains -- Definition 2.5.4. , Remark 2.5.5 -- Lemma 2.5.6 (Gauß' Lemma) -- Example 2.5.7 -- Proposition-Definition 2.5.8 -- Lemma 2.5.9 -- 2.5.3 Principal ideal domains -- Definition 2.5.10 -- Proposition 2.5.11 -- Exercise 2.5.12 -- Lemma 2.5.13 -- Remark 2.5.14 -- 2.5.4 Euclidean rings -- Definition and first properties Definition 2.5.15 -- Examples 2.5.16 -- Remark 2.5.17 -- Exercise 2.5.18 -- Proposition 2.5.19 -- Lemma 2.5.20 -- Remark 2.5.21 -- Complement without proofs: quadratic extensions of -- Theorem 2.5.22 -- Remark 2.5.23 -- Theorem 2.5.24 -- About Euclidean rings: Euclid's algorithm -- 2.5.5 Case of -- and application -- Remark 2.5.25 -- Theorem 2.5.26 -- Example 2.5.27 -- Exercise 2.5.28 -- 2.6 Roots of Unity, Cyclotomic Polynomials -- 2.7 More Exercises -- Chapter 3 Polynomial Rings in Several Indeterminates -- 3.1 Universal Property, Substitutions -- 3.1.1 First particular case -- 3.1.2 Second particular case: evaluation function -- 3.1.3 Third particular case: substitution -- 3.1.4 Fourth particular case: specialization -- 3.2 Symmetric Polynomials -- 3.2.1 Definition and fundamental theorem -- 3.2.2 Newton formulae -- 3.2.3 Symmetric fractions -- 3.2.4 Antisymmetric polynomials -- 3.3 Resultant and Discriminant -- 3.3.1 Resultant of two polynomials -- 3.3.2 First properties -- 3.3.3 Resultant and roots -- 3.3.4 A geometric application -- 3.3.5 Discriminant -- 3.4 More Exercises -- Chapter 4 More on Modules -- 4.1 Several Equivalent Definitions -- 4.1.1 Two definitions of "module" -- 4.1.2 Morphisms -- 4.2 Submodules -- 4.2.1 Generalities -- 4.2.2 Direct sums -- 4.2.3 Quotients -- 4.2.4 Kernels, images, cokernels, coimages -- 4.2.5 Exact sequences -- 4.2.6 Ideals and modules -- 4.3 Torsion Elements, Torsion Submodule -- 4.3.1 Cyclic modules -- 4.3.2 Torsion and torsion free elements -- 4.4 Free and Generating Systems, Free Modules. , 4.4.1 Free systems, generating systems, bases -- 4.4.2 A property of free modules -- 4.4.3 Projective modules -- 4.5 Sums and Products -- 4.5.1 Direct sums (coproducts) and products -- 4.5.2 Split exact sequences -- 4.6 -Linear and Abelian -Linear Categories -- 4.6.1 Initial, terminal, null objects -- 4.6.2 -linear categories -- 4.6.3 -linear functors -- 4.6.4 An example: stable category -- 4.6.5 Kernels and cokernels -- 4.6.6 Canonical decomposition of a morphism -- 4.6.7 A bunch of definitions for abelian categories -- 4.6.8 Grothendieck group -- 4.6.9 Functors between abelian -linear categories -- 4.7 More Exercises -- 4.8 Tensor Products -- 4.8.1 Definition of the tensor product -- 4.8.2 Functoriality and other properties of the tensor product -- 4.8.3 Exact sequences, Hom and ⊗ -- 4.8.4 Tensor product and duality -- 4.8.5 Extension of scalars -- 4.8.6 Extending scalars for an algebra -- 4.8.7 Trace and restriction of scalars -- 4.8.8 Complement: Kronecker product of matrices -- 4.9 Tensor, Symmetric and Exterior Algebras -- 4.9.1 Symmetric and alternating squares -- 4.9.2 Tensor algebra -- 4.9.3 Symmetric algebra -- 4.9.4 Exterior algebra -- 4.10 More on Algebras -- 4.10.1 Generalities about algebras -- 4.10.2 Left and right modules -- 4.10.3 Tensor product of left with right modules -- 4.10.4 Tensor product and bimodules -- Exercise 4.10.14 -- Proposition 4.10.15 -- 4.10.5 A famous adjunction -- Proposition 4.10.16 -- mod -- Exercises 4.10.17 -- mod -- 4.11 Modules Over a Matrix Algebra -- 4.11.1 An equivalence of categories -- 4.11.2 An application: the Skolem-Noether theorem -- 4.12 More Exercises -- Chapter 5 On Representations of Finite Groups -- 5.1 Generalities on Representations -- 5.1.1 Introduction -- 5.1.2 Representations on a category -- 5.2 Set-Representations -- 5.2.1 Union and product -- 5.2.2 Transitive representations. , 5.2.3 Classification of transitive representations -- 5.2.4 Burnside's marks -- 5.2.5 Induction and restriction -- 5.2.6 Generalized transfer -- 5.3 Linear Representations -- 5.3.1 Generalities -- 5.3.2 The group algebra -- 5.3.3 Induction and restriction for finite group algebras -- 5.3.3.1 Restriction -- 5.3.3.2 Induction Definition -- 5.3.3.3 Universal property of induction -- 5.3.3.4 Induction and tensor product -- 5.3.3.5 Another definition of induction -- 5.3.4 Mackey's formula -- 5.3.5 Trace on induced modules -- 5.3.6 Generalized tensor induction -- 5.3.7 Complement: fixed and cofixed points -- 5.4 Projective Representations, Twisted Group Algebras -- 5.4.1 Preliminary: fragments on cohomology -- 5.4.2 Projective representations, ×-groups, twisted group algebras -- 5.4.3 Above a stable module for a normal subgroup -- 5.5 More Exercises -- Part II Integral Domains, Polynomials, Fields -- Chapter 6 Prime and Maximal Ideals, Integral Domains -- 6.1 Definition and First Examples -- 6.2 Examples in Polynomial Rings -- 6.2.1 Generalities -- 6.2.2 Example of maximal ideals of Z[ ] -- 6.3 Nilradical and Radical -- 6.3.1 Characterizations -- 6.3.2 Local rings -- 6.3.3 Finite-dimensional algebras over a field -- 6.4 Integral Domains, Fields of Fractions -- 6.4.1 Construction of field of fractions -- 6.4.2 Universal property of the field of fractions -- 6.5 Localizations -- 6.5.1 Localizations on rings -- 6.5.2 Localizations on modules -- 6.5.3 Local properties of modules -- 6.5.4 On localization and projectivity -- 6.6 Irreducibility Criteria in [ ] -- 6.6.1 Primitive and irreducible polynomials -- 6.6.2 Reduction modulo a prime ideal -- 6.6.3 Case of [ ] for factorial -- 6.6.4 Content and primitive part -- 6.6.5 Example-Exercise: the decimal numbers -- 6.6.6 An application: automorphisms of ( ) -- 6.6.7 Eisenstein criterion. , 6.6.8 More on irreducible elements in ( -- 6.7 Transfer Properties -- 6.7.1 Transfer of some properties to polynomial rings -- 6.7.2 Yet another proof of the Cayley-Hamilton theorem -- 6.8 More Exercises -- Chapter 7 Fields, Division Rings -- 7.1 Finite Subgroups of the Multiplicative Group of a Field -- 7.2 Algebraic Extensions -- 7.2.1 First properties -- 7.2.2 Algebraic closure -- 7.3 Splitting Polynomials, Normal Extensions -- 7.4 Separable Polynomials, Separable Extensions -- 7.5 Norm and Traces for Normal Separable Extensions -- 7.6 Short Introduction to Galois Theory -- 7.6.1 Quick overview -- 7.6.2 The Galois group as a permutation group -- 7.6.3 The generic equation -- 7.7 Finite Fields -- 7.8 Quaternions -- 7.8.1 Rings of quaternions -- 7.8.2 The quaternion group of order 8 -- 7.9 More Exercises -- Part III Finitely Generated Modules -- Chapter 8 Integrality, Noetherianity -- 8.1 Integrality Over a Ring -- 8.1.1 Definition and characterization -- 8.1.2 Integral extensions -- 8.1.3 Integrality and localization -- 8.1.4 Integral closure and field extensions -- 8.2 Complement: Jacobson Rings, Hilbert's Nullstellensatz -- 8.2.1 On maximal ideals of polynomial algebras -- 8.2.2 Application to algebraic varieties -- 8.3 Noetherian Rings and Modules -- 8.3.1 Noetherian modules -- 8.3.2 Noetherian rings -- 8.3.3 Hilbert's Basis Theorem -- 8.3.4 Localization over Noetherian rings -- 8.3.5 More exercises -- Chapter 9 Finitely Generated Projective Modules -- 9.1 Rank and Basis of a Finitely Generated Free Module -- 9.1.1 Rank: another proof -- 9.1.2 The dual of a free module of finite rank -- 9.1.3 About finitely generated torsion-free modules -- 9.2 Finitely Generated Projective Modules -- 9.2.1 Characterization, dual -- 9.2.2 Projective morphisms -- 9.2.3 A series of characterizations -- 9.2.4 The case of local rings -- 9.3 More Exercises. , Chapter 10 Finitely Generated Modules Over Dedekind Domains.
    Weitere Ausg.: Print version: Broué, Michel From Rings and Modules to Hopf Algebras Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2024 ISBN 9783031500619
    Sprache: Englisch
    Bibliothek Standort Signatur Band/Heft/Jahr Verfügbarkeit
    BibTip Andere fanden auch interessant ...
Meinten Sie 9783031050619?
Meinten Sie 9783031500169?
Meinten Sie 9783031200618?
Schließen ⊗
Diese Webseite nutzt Cookies und das Analyse-Tool Matomo. Weitere Informationen finden Sie auf den KOBV Seiten zum Datenschutz