Free product of associative algebras

Algebraic structure → Ring theory
Ring theory
Basic concepts
Rings
• Subrings
• Ideal
• Quotient ring
• Fractional ideal
Total ring of fractions
• Product of rings
• Free product of associative algebras
Tensor product of algebras

Ring homomorphisms

• Kernel
Inner automorphism
• Frobenius endomorphism

Algebraic structures

• Module
• Associative algebra
• Graded ring
• Involutive ring
• Category of rings
• Initial ring Z {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} }
• Terminal ring 0 = Z / 1 Z {\displaystyle 0=\mathbb {Z} /1\mathbb {Z} }

Related structures

• Field
• Finite field
• Non-associative ring
Lie ring
Jordan ring
Semiring
Semifield
Commutative rings
Integral domain
Integrally closed domain
GCD domain
Unique factorization domain
Principal ideal domain
Euclidean domain
• Field
Finite field
Polynomial ring
Formal power series ring

Algebraic number theory

Algebraic number field
• Integers modulo n
Ring of integers
p-adic integers Z p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} _{p}}
p-adic numbers Q p {\displaystyle \mathbb {Q} _{p}}
• Prüfer p-ring Z ( p ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {Z} (p^{\infty })}
  • v
  • t
  • e

In algebra, the free product (coproduct) of a family of associative algebras A i , i I {\displaystyle A_{i},i\in I} over a commutative ring R is the associative algebra over R that is, roughly, defined by the generators and the relations of the A i {\displaystyle A_{i}} 's. The free product of two algebras A, B is denoted by A ∗ B. The notion is a ring-theoretic analog of a free product of groups.

In the category of commutative R-algebras, the free product of two algebras (in that category) is their tensor product.

Construction

We first define a free product of two algebras. Let A and B be algebras over a commutative ring R. Consider their tensor algebra, the direct sum of all possible finite tensor products of A, B; explicitly, T = n = 0 T n {\displaystyle T=\bigoplus _{n=0}^{\infty }T_{n}} where

T 0 = R , T 1 = A B , T 2 = ( A A ) ( A B ) ( B A ) ( B B ) , T 3 = , {\displaystyle T_{0}=R,\,T_{1}=A\oplus B,\,T_{2}=(A\otimes A)\oplus (A\otimes B)\oplus (B\otimes A)\oplus (B\otimes B),\,T_{3}=\cdots ,\dots }

We then set

A B = T / I {\displaystyle A*B=T/I}

where I is the two-sided ideal generated by elements of the form

a a a a , b b b b , 1 A 1 B . {\displaystyle a\otimes a'-aa',\,b\otimes b'-bb',\,1_{A}-1_{B}.}

We then verify the universal property of coproduct holds for this (this is straightforward.)

A finite free product is defined similarly.

References

  • K. I. Beidar, W. S. Martindale and A. V. Mikhalev, Rings with generalized identities, Section 1.4. This reference was mentioned in "Coproduct in the category of (noncommutative) associative algebras". Stack Exchange. May 9, 2012.
  • "How to construct the coproduct of two (non-commutative) rings". Stack Exchange. January 3, 2014.


Stub icon

This algebra-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e