Английская Википедия:G-module

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Toroidal coord.png
The torus can be made an abelian group isomorphic to the product of the circle group. This abelian group is a Klein four-group-module, where the group acts by reflection in each of the coordinate directions (here depicted by red and blue arrows intersecting at the identity element).

In mathematics, given a group G, a G-module is an abelian group M on which G acts compatibly with the abelian group structure on M. This widely applicable notion generalizes that of a representation of G. Group (co)homology provides an important set of tools for studying general G-modules.

The term G-module is also used for the more general notion of an R-module on which G acts linearly (i.e. as a group of R-module automorphisms).

Definition and basics

Let <math>G</math> be a group. A left <math>G</math>-module consists of[1] an abelian group <math>M</math> together with a left group action <math>\rho:G\times M\to M</math> such that

g·(a1 + a2) = g·a1 + g·a2

for all a1 and a2 in M and all g in G, where g·a denotes ρ(g,a). A right G-module is defined similarly. Given a left G-module M, it can be turned into a right G-module by defining a·g = g−1·a.

A function f : MN is called a morphism of G-modules (or a G-linear map, or a G-homomorphism) if f is both a group homomorphism and G-equivariant.

The collection of left (respectively right) G-modules and their morphisms form an abelian category G-Mod (resp. Mod-G). The category G-Mod (resp. Mod-G) can be identified with the category of left (resp. right) ZG-modules, i.e. with the modules over the group ring Z[G].

A submodule of a G-module M is a subgroup AM that is stable under the action of G, i.e. g·aA for all gG and aA. Given a submodule A of M, the quotient module M/A is the quotient group with action g·(m + A) = g·m + A.

Examples

<math>(g\cdot f)(x,y)=f((x,y)g^t)=f\left((x,y)\cdot\begin{bmatrix}
    \alpha & \gamma \\
    \beta & \delta
 \end{bmatrix}\right)=f(\alpha x+\beta y,\gamma x+\delta y),</math>
where
<math>g=\begin{bmatrix}
    \alpha & \beta \\
    \gamma & \delta
 \end{bmatrix}</math>
and (x, y)g is matrix multiplication. Then M is a G-module studied by Gauss.[2] Indeed, we have
<math>g(h(f(x,y))) = gf((x,y)h^t)=f((x,y)h^tg^t)=f((x,y)(gh)^t)=(gh)f(x,y).</math>
  • If V is a representation of G over a field K, then V is a G-module (it is an abelian group under addition).

Topological groups

If G is a topological group and M is an abelian topological group, then a topological G-module is a G-module where the action map G×MM is continuous (where the product topology is taken on G×M).[3]

In other words, a topological G-module is an abelian topological group M together with a continuous map G×MM satisfying the usual relations g(a + a′) = ga + ga′, (gg′)a = g(g′a), and 1a = a.

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

References