Monoid ring

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Short description: Algebraic structure

In abstract algebra, a monoid ring is a ring constructed from a ring and a monoid, just as a group ring is constructed from a ring and a group.

Definition

Let R be a ring and let G be a monoid. The monoid ring or monoid algebra of G over R, denoted R[G] or RG, is the set of formal sums [math]\displaystyle{ \sum_{g \in G} r_g g }[/math], where [math]\displaystyle{ r_g \in R }[/math] for each [math]\displaystyle{ g \in G }[/math] and rg = 0 for all but finitely many g, equipped with coefficient-wise addition, and the multiplication in which the elements of R commute with the elements of G. More formally, R[G] is the set of functions φ: GR such that {g : φ(g) ≠ 0} is finite, equipped with addition of functions, and with multiplication defined by

[math]\displaystyle{ (\phi \psi)(g) = \sum_{k\ell=g} \phi(k) \psi(\ell) }[/math].

If G is a group, then R[G] is also called the group ring of G over R.

Universal property

Given R and G, there is a ring homomorphism α: RR[G] sending each r to r1 (where 1 is the identity element of G), and a monoid homomorphism β: GR[G] (where the latter is viewed as a monoid under multiplication) sending each g to 1g (where 1 is the multiplicative identity of R). We have that α(r) commutes with β(g) for all r in R and g in G.

The universal property of the monoid ring states that given a ring S, a ring homomorphism α': RS, and a monoid homomorphism β': GS to the multiplicative monoid of S, such that α'(r) commutes with β'(g) for all r in R and g in G, there is a unique ring homomorphism γ: R[G] → S such that composing α and β with γ produces α' and β '.

Augmentation

The augmentation is the ring homomorphism η: R[G] → R defined by

[math]\displaystyle{ \eta\left(\sum_{g\in G} r_g g\right) = \sum_{g\in G} r_g. }[/math]

The kernel of η is called the augmentation ideal. It is a free R-module with basis consisting of 1 – g for all g in G not equal to 1.

Examples

Given a ring R and the (additive) monoid of natural numbers N (or {xn} viewed multiplicatively), we obtain the ring R[{xn}] =: R[x] of polynomials over R. The monoid Nn (with the addition) gives the polynomial ring with n variables: R[Nn] =: R[X1, ..., Xn].

Generalization

If G is a semigroup, the same construction yields a semigroup ring R[G].

See also

References

Further reading