Tensor Products of Modules and Free Abelian Groups based on Cartesian Product

In summary, the conversation revolves around the topic of the construction of the tensor product, specifically the free abelian group involved in it. The group consists of finite sums with coefficients from the integers, and the question is raised about how arithmetic is done with these elements and how they play a role in forming the quotient for the tensor product. It is clarified that the sums are formal and cannot be combined unless the $(a,b)$ part of the terms is identical. The introduction of balanced maps is also mentioned as a way to combine terms when $R$ is a commutative ring.
  • #1
Math Amateur
Gold Member
MHB
3,998
48
I am reading Donald S. Passmore's book "A Course in Ring Theory" ...

I am currently focussed on Chapter 9 Tensor Products ... ...

I need help in order to get a full understanding of the free abelian group involved in the construction of the tensor product ... ...

The text by Passmore relevant to the free abelian group involved in the construction of the tensor product is as follows:View attachment 5591My question is about the nature of the free abelian group S whose elements are finite sums of the form ...\(\displaystyle \sum_{ (a,b) \in A \times B } z_{ a,b } (a, b) \text{ with } z_{ a,b } \in \mathbb{Z}
\)
So \(\displaystyle 3(a_3, b_5) + 4(a_7, b_5)\) and \(\displaystyle 1(a_1, b_1)\) are members of \(\displaystyle S\) ...But how does this group 'work' ... and how do we do arithmetic (if we can?) with the elements ... and how do we end up with elements like \(\displaystyle (a_1 + a_2, b)\) that play a role in forming the quotient for the tensor product ... ... Hope someone can help ...

(Apologies if I have asked a similar question before ... suspect the answer may be that we can only form formal sums and can do no arithmetic with the elements ... ... )

Peter

*** NOTE ***

To allow MHB members to be aware of the context of my question I am providing Passmore's introduction to his chapter on tensor products which includes the text given above ... ... as follows:https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/5592
View attachment 5593
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Yes, formal sums. We can only "combine" these sums if the $(a,b)$ part of the $z_{a,b}(a,b)$ terms is identical:

$3(a_1,b_3) + 2(a_1,b_3) = 5(a_1,b_3)$.

A summand like $(a_1+a_2,b)$ arises just as a "general term" in $\mathcal{S}(A\times B)$, the addition between $a_1$ and $a_2$ takes place in $A$, not in $\mathcal{S}(A \times B)$.

After we take the quotient, we have more "options" for combining terms.

Balanced maps are introduced (instead of $R$-bilinear maps) because we are "combining" left and right modules. When $R$ is a commutative ring (such as a field, for example) we can ignore such niceties.
 
Last edited:
  • #3
Deveno said:
Yes, formal sums. We can only "combine" these sums if the $(a,b)$ part of the $z_{a,b}(a,b)$ terms is identical:

$3(a_1,b_3) + 2(a_1,b_3) = 5(a_1,b_3)$.

A summand like $(a_1+a_2,b)$ arises just as a "general term" in $\mathcal{S}(A\times B)$, the addition between $a_1$ and $a_2$ takes place in $A$, not in $\mathcal{S}(A \times B)$.

After we take the quotient, we have more "options" for combining terms.

Balanced maps are introduced (instead of $R$-bilinear maps) because we are "combining" left and right modules. When $R$ is a commutative ring (such as a field, for example) we can ignore such niceties.
Thank you, Deveno ...

Most helpful and also reassuring ...

Peter
 

Related to Tensor Products of Modules and Free Abelian Groups based on Cartesian Product

1. What is a tensor product of modules?

A tensor product of modules is a construction in abstract algebra that combines two modules over a ring to create a new module. It is a generalization of the Cartesian product of sets.

2. How is a tensor product of modules different from a Cartesian product?

A tensor product of modules takes into account the module structure and module homomorphisms, whereas a Cartesian product only considers the elements of the sets being multiplied. Additionally, the tensor product is a bilinear operation, meaning it is linear in each factor separately, while the Cartesian product is not necessarily linear.

3. What is a free abelian group?

A free abelian group is a group that is generated by a set of elements with no relations between them. This means that any element in the group can be written as a unique combination of the generators and their inverses.

4. How are tensor products of modules and free abelian groups related?

The tensor product of two free abelian groups is the same as the free abelian group generated by the Cartesian product of the two original groups. This can be extended to tensor products of modules over a ring, where the tensor product of free modules is the free module generated by the Cartesian product of the two original modules.

5. What are some applications of tensor products of modules and free abelian groups?

Tensor products have many applications in abstract algebra, algebraic geometry, and representation theory. They are also used in physics, particularly in quantum mechanics, where they are used to describe the interactions between quantum systems. In computer science, tensor products are used in machine learning algorithms for feature extraction and data analysis.

Similar threads

Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
11
Views
1K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
5
Views
1K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • Linear and Abstract Algebra
Replies
1
Views
1K
Back
Top