Purity, spectra and localisation / Mike Prest.
Material type: TextSeries: Encyclopedia of mathematics and its applications ; 121.Publication details: Cambridge ; Cambridge University Press, 2009.Description: xxviii, 769 p. ; 25 cmISBN:- 9780521873086 (hbk.)
- 511.3 23 P936
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | ISI Library, Kolkata | 511.3 P936 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 138319 |
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511.3 P748 Proof theory | 511.3 P828 First steps in modal logic | 511.3 P936 Mathematical logic and model theory : | 511.3 P936 Purity, spectra and localisation / | 511.3 P977 Logical foundations of mathematics and computational complexity : | 511.3 Q7 Mathematical logic | 511.3 Q7 Mathematical logic |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Pp conditions --
2. Purity --
3. Pp-pairs and definable subcategories --
4. Pp-types and pure-injectivity --
5. The Ziegler spectrum --
6. Rings of definable scalars --
7. M-dimension and width --
8. Examples --
9. Ideals in mod-R --
10. Finitely presented functors --
11. Serre subcategories and localisation --
12. The Ziegler spectrum and injective functors --
13. Dimensions --
14. The Zariski spectrum and the sheaf of definable scalars --
15. Artin algebras --
16. Finitely accessible and presentable additive categories --
17. Spectra of triangulated categories --
18. Definable categories and interpretation functors.
It is possible to associate a topological space to the category of modules over any ring. This space, the Ziegler spectrum, is based on the indecomposable pure-injective modules. Although the Ziegler spectrum arose within the model theory of modules and plays a central role in that subject, this book concentrates specifically on its algebraic aspects and uses. The central aim is to understand modules and the categories they form through associated structures and dimensions, which reflect the complexity of these, and similar, categories. The structures and dimensions considered arise particularly through the application of model-theoretic and functor-category ideas and methods. Purity and associated notions are central, localisation is an ever-present theme and various types of spectrum play organising roles. This book presents a unified, coherent account of material which is often presented from very different viewpoints and clarifies the relationships between these various approaches.
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