Finite algebra

In abstract algebra, an associative algebra A {\displaystyle A} over a ring R {\displaystyle R} is called finite if it is finitely generated as an R {\displaystyle R} -module. An R {\displaystyle R} -algebra can be thought as a homomorphism of rings f : R A {\displaystyle f\colon R\to A} , in this case f {\displaystyle f} is called a finite morphism if A {\displaystyle A} is a finite R {\displaystyle R} -algebra.[1]

Being a finite algebra is a stronger condition than being an algebra of finite type.

Finite morphisms in algebraic geometry

This concept is closely related to that of finite morphism in algebraic geometry; in the simplest case of affine varieties, given two affine varieties V A n {\displaystyle V\subseteq \mathbb {A} ^{n}} , W A m {\displaystyle W\subseteq \mathbb {A} ^{m}} and a dominant regular map ϕ : V W {\displaystyle \phi \colon V\to W} , the induced homomorphism of k {\displaystyle \Bbbk } -algebras ϕ : Γ ( W ) Γ ( V ) {\displaystyle \phi ^{*}\colon \Gamma (W)\to \Gamma (V)} defined by ϕ f = f ϕ {\displaystyle \phi ^{*}f=f\circ \phi } turns Γ ( V ) {\displaystyle \Gamma (V)} into a Γ ( W ) {\displaystyle \Gamma (W)} -algebra:

ϕ {\displaystyle \phi } is a finite morphism of affine varieties if ϕ : Γ ( W ) Γ ( V ) {\displaystyle \phi ^{*}\colon \Gamma (W)\to \Gamma (V)} is a finite morphism of k {\displaystyle \Bbbk } -algebras.[2]

The generalisation to schemes can be found in the article on finite morphisms.

References

  1. ^ Atiyah, Michael Francis; Macdonald, Ian Grant (1994). Introduction to commutative algebra. CRC Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780201407518.
  2. ^ Perrin, Daniel (2008). Algebraic Geometry An Introduction. Springer. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-84800-056-8.

See also

  • Finite morphism
  • Finitely generated algebra
  • Finitely generated module


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