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Morita equivalence

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2020 Mathematics Subject Classification: Primary: 16D90 [MSN][ZBL]

An equivalence relation on the class of all rings defined as follows: Two rings and S are called Morita equivalent if the categories of left (right) R- and S-modules are equivalent (cf. Equivalence of categories). The most important examples of Morita-equivalent rings are: a ring R and the ring of all n \times n-matrices over R. In order that there is Morita equivalence between two rings R and S it is necessary and sufficient that in the category of left R-modules there is a finitely-generated projective generator U such that its ring of endomorphisms is isomorphic to S. The left R-module A is put in correspondence with the left S-module \mathrm{Hom}_R(U,A). Among the properties preserved by transition to a Morita-equivalent ring are the properties of being: Artinian, Noetherian, primary, simple, classically semi-simple, regular, self-injective, hereditary, and primitive.

Alongside with Morita equivalence one considers Morita duality, relating some subcategories of the categories of left R-modules and right S-modules (mostly the subcategories of finitely-generated modules). However, the very existence of such a duality places definite restrictions on the rings R and S. In particular, for R=S this implies that R is a quasi-Frobenius ring.

The general concept of Morita equivalence was developed by K. Morita [1].

References

[1] K. Morita, Sci. Reports Tokyo Kyoiku Dajkagu A , 6 (1958) pp. 83–142
[2] H. Bass, "Algebraic K-theory" , Benjamin (1968)
[3] C. Faith, "Algebra: rings, modules and categories" , 1–2 , Springer (1981–1976)
[4] P. Cohn, "Morita equivalence and duality" , London (1976)


Comments

For generating objects of categories see also Generator of a category.

Let \mathcal{C} and \mathcal{D} be categories. A duality is a pair of contravariant functors T : \mathcal{D} \rightarrow \mathcal{C} and S : \mathcal{C} \rightarrow \mathcal{D} such that ST \simeq \text{id}_{\mathcal{C}}, TS \simeq \text{id}_{\mathcal{D}}, where \simeq denotes natural equivalence (functorial isomorphism) and \text{id}_{\mathcal{X}} is the identity functor on \mathcal{X}.

Let A and B be rings and let \mathcal{C} and \mathcal{D} be full subcategories of the categories of right A-modules \textbf{Mod}_A and left B-modules {}_B\textbf{Mod}, respectively (cf. Module). Let U be a (B,A) bimodule. A duality (T,S) between \mathcal{C} and \mathcal{D} is called a U-duality or Morita duality if T and S are, respectively, naturally equivalent to \text{Hom}_A({\cdot},U) and \text{Hom}_B(U,{\cdot}). A theorem of Morita says that if \mathcal{C} and \mathcal{D} are Abelian full subcategories with A \in \mathcal{C} and B \in \mathcal{D}, then any duality (T,S) between \mathcal{C} and \mathcal{D} is a U-duality with U = TA.

How to Cite This Entry:
Morita equivalence. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Morita_equivalence&oldid=39831
This article was adapted from an original article by L.A. Skornyakov (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article