Basic Representation Theory of Algebras
2020 • 321 pages

This textbook introduces the representation theory of algebras by focusing on two of its most important aspects: the Auslander–Reiten theory and the study of the radical of a module category. It starts by introducing and describing several characterisations of the radical of a module category, then presents the central concepts of irreducible morphisms and almost split sequences, before providing the definition of the Auslander–Reiten quiver, which encodes much of the information on the module category. It then turns to the study of endomorphism algebras, leading on one hand to the definition of the Auslander algebra and on the other to tilting theory. The book ends with selected properties of representation-finite algebras, which are now the best understood class of algebras. Intended for graduate students in representation theory, this book is also of interest to any mathematician wanting to learn the fundamentals of this rapidly growing field. A graduate course in non-commutative or homological algebra, which is standard in most universities, is a prerequisite for readers of this book.

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153 primary books

#283 in Graduate Texts in Mathematics

Graduate Texts in Mathematics is a 153-book series with 153 released primary works first released in 1899 with contributions by G. Takeuti, W M Zaring, and John C. Oxtoby.

#1
Introduction to Axiomatic Set Theory
#2
Measure and Category: A Survey of the Analogies between Topological and Measure Spaces
#4
A Course in Homological Algebra
#5
Category Theory
#7
A Course in Arithmetic
#9
Introduction to Lie Algebras and Representation Theory
#11
Functions of One Complex Variable
#13
Rings and Categories of Modules
#18
Measure theory
#19
A Hilbert Space Problem Book
#20
Fibre Bundles
#21
Linear Algebraic Groups

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