Tensor product of algebras explained
In mathematics, the tensor product of two algebras over a commutative ring R is also an R-algebra. This gives the tensor product of algebras. When the ring is a field, the most common application of such products is to describe the product of algebra representations.
Definition
Let R be a commutative ring and let A and B be R-algebras. Since A and B may both be regarded as R-modules, their tensor product
is also an
R-module. The tensor product can be given the structure of a ring by defining the product on elements of the form by
[1] (a1 ⊗ b1)(a2 ⊗ b2)=a1a2 ⊗ b1b2
and then extending by linearity to all of . This ring is an
R-algebra, associative and unital with identity element given by .
[2] where 1
A and 1
B are the identity elements of
A and
B. If
A and
B are commutative, then the tensor product is commutative as well.
The tensor product turns the category of R-algebras into a symmetric monoidal category.
Further properties
There are natural homomorphisms from A and B to given by[3]
These maps make the tensor product the
coproduct in the category of commutative
R-algebras. The tensor product is
not the coproduct in the category of all
R-algebras. There the coproduct is given by a more general
free product of algebras. Nevertheless, the tensor product of non-commutative algebras can be described by a
universal property similar to that of the coproduct:
Hom(A ⊗ B,X)\cong\lbrace(f,g)\inHom(A,X) x Hom(B,X)\mid\foralla\inA,b\inB:[f(a),g(b)]=0\rbrace,
where [-, -] denotes the
commutator.The natural isomorphism is given by identifying a morphism
on the left hand side with the pair of morphisms
on the right hand side where
and similarly
.
Applications
The tensor product of commutative algebras is of frequent use in algebraic geometry. For affine schemes X, Y, Z with morphisms from X and Z to Y, so X = Spec(A), Y = Spec(R), and Z = Spec(B) for some commutative rings A, R, B, the fiber product scheme is the affine scheme corresponding to the tensor product of algebras:
X x YZ=\operatorname{Spec}(A ⊗ RB).
More generally, the fiber product of schemes is defined by gluing together affine fiber products of this form.
Examples
- The tensor product can be used as a means of taking intersections of two subschemes in a scheme: consider the
-algebras
,
, then their tensor product is
C[x,y]/(f) ⊗ C[x,y]C[x,y]/(g)\congC[x,y]/(f,g)
, which describes the intersection of the
algebraic curves
f = 0 and
g = 0 in the affine plane over
C.
is a commutative ring and
are ideals, then
, with a unique isomorphism sending
to
.
- Tensor products can be used as a means of changing coefficients. For example,
Z[x,y]/(x3+5x2+x-1) ⊗ ZZ/5\congZ/5[x,y]/(x3+x-1)
and
Z[x,y]/(f) ⊗ ZC\congC[x,y]/(f)
.
- Tensor products also can be used for taking products of affine schemes over a field. For example,
C[x1,x2]/(f(x)) ⊗ CC[y1,y2]/(g(y))
is
isomorphic to the algebra
C[x1,x2,y1,y2]/(f(x),g(y))
which corresponds to an affine surface in
if
f and
g are not zero.
-algebras
and
whose underlying rings are
graded-commutative rings, the tensor product
becomes a graded commutative ring by defining
(a ⊗ b)(a' ⊗ b')=(-1)|b||a'|aa' ⊗ bb'
for homogeneous
,
,
, and
.
See also
References
- .
- Book: Lang, Serge . Algebra . Graduate Texts in Mathematics . 21 . Springer . 2002 . first published in 1993 . 0-387-95385-X .
Notes and References
- Kassel (1995), [{{Google books|plainurl=y|id=S1KE_pToY98C|page=32|text=we put an algebra structure on the tensor product}} p. 32].
- Kassel (1995), [{{Google books|plainurl=y|id=S1KE_pToY98C|page=32|text=Its unit is}} p. 32].
- Kassel (1995), [{{Google books|plainurl=y|id=S1KE_pToY98C|page=32|text=get algebra morphisms}} p. 32].