Warning. This schedule is subject to changes. Recheck this web site the day before any activity.
Tuesday December 6
|
10-12
|
Last Class
|
Wednesday December 7
|
12-2
|
Dror's Office Hours, Bahen 6178.
|
|
2PM
|
HW5 "early bird" due date. If you submit HW5 by this time, it will be marked by noon of the following day.
|
Thursday December 8
|
10:30-12:30
|
Dror's Office Hours, Bahen 6178.
|
|
Noon
|
HW5 due date, to be graded after the final. Also, at this time "early bird" marked HW5 can be collected at Dror's Office.
|
Solve the following questions
Problem 1. Let
be a module over a PID
. Assume that
is isomorphic to
, with
non-zero non-units and with
. Assume also that
is isomorphic to
, with
non-zero non-units and with
. Prove that
, that
, and that
for each
.
Problem 2. Let
and
be primes in a PID
such that
, let
denote the operation of "multiplication by
", acting on any
-module
, and let
and
be positive integers.
- For each of the
-modules
,
, and
, determine
and
.
- Explain why this approach for proving the uniqueness in the structure theorem for finitely generated modules fails.
Problem 3. (comprehensive exam, 2009) Find the tensor product of the
modules
("Laurent polynomials in
") and
(here
acts on
as
).
Problem 4. (from Selick) Show that if
is a PID and
is a multiplicative subset of
then
is also a PID.
Definition. The "rank" of a module
over a (commutative) domain
is the maximal number of
-linearly-independent elements of
. (Linear dependence and independence is defined as in vector spaces).
Definition. An element
of a module
over a commutative domain
is called a "torsion element" if there is a non-zero
such that
. Let
denote the set of all torsion elements of
. (Check that
is always a submodule of
, but don't bother writing this up). A module
is called a "torsion module" if
.
Problem 5. (Dummit and Foote, page 468) Let
be a module over a commutative domain
.
- Suppose that
has rank
and that
is a maximal set of linearly independent elements of
. Show that
is isomorphic to
and that
is a torsion module.
- Converesely show that if
contains a submodule
which is isomorphic to
for some
, and so that
is torsion, then the rank of
is
.
Problem 6. (see also Dummit and Foote, page 469) Show that the ideal
in
, regarded as a module over
, is finitely generated but cannot be written in the form
.