In ring theory and Frobenius algebra extensions, areas of mathematics, there is a notion of depth two subring or depth of a Frobenius extension. The notion of depth two is important in a certain noncommutative Galois theory, which generates Hopf algebroids in place of the more classical Galois groups, whereas the notion of depth greater than two measures the defect, or distance, from being depth two in a tower of iterated endomorphism rings above the subring. A more recent definition of depth of any unital subring in any associative ring is proposed (see below) in a paper studying the depth of a subgroup of a finite group as group algebras over a commutative ring.
A unital subring
B\subseteqA
An → A ⊗ BA
An=A x \ldots x A
For example, let A be the group algebra of a finite group G (over any commutative base ring k; see the articles on group theory and group ring for the elementary definitions). Let B be the group (sub)algebra of a normal subgroup H of index n in G with coset representatives
g1, … ,gn
An → A ⊗ BA
p((a1, … ,an))=
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
ai
-1 | |
g | |
i |
⊗ Bgi
q:A ⊗ BA → An
q(a ⊗ Ba')=(a\gamma1(a'), … ,a\gamman(a'))
\gammai(g)=\deltaijg
gjH
A ⊗ BA
As another example (perhaps more elementary than the first; see ring theory or module theory for some of the elementary notions), let A be an algebra over a commutative ring B, where B is taken to be in the center of A. Assume A is a finite projective B-module, so there are B-linear mapping
fi:A → B
xi\inA
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
xifi(a)=a
p(a1, … ,an)=
n | |
\sum | |
i=1 |
xi ⊗ Bai
q(a ⊗ Ba')=(f1(a)a', … ,fn(a)a')
For a Frobenius algebra extension A | B (such as A and B group algebras of a subgroup pair of finite index) the two one-sided conditions of depth two are equivalent, and a notion of depth n > 2 makes sense via the right endomorphism ring extension iterated to generate a tower of rings (a technical procedure beyond the scope of this survey, although the first step, the endomorphism ring theorem, is described in the section on Frobenius extension under Frobenius algebra). For example, if B is a Hopf subalgebra of a finite-dimensional Hopf algebra, then B has depth two in A if and only if B is normal in A (i.e. invariant under the left and right adjoint actions of A). Since a group algebra is a Hopf algebra, the first example above illustrates the back implication of the theorem. Other examples come from the fact that finite Hopf-Galois extensions are depth two in a strong sense (the split epimorphism in the definition may be replaced by a bimodule isomorphism).
Let R be a Hopf subalgebra of a finite-dimensional Hopf algebra H. Let R° denote the maximal ideal of elements of R having counit value 0. Then R°H is a right ideal and coideal in H, and the quotient module Q = H/R°H is a right H-module coalgebra. For example, if H is a group algebra, then R is a subgroup algebra of H, and one shows as an exercise that Q is isomorphic to the permutation module on the right cosets. The 2013 paper referenced below proves that the depth of R in H is determined to the nearest even value by the depth of Q as an R-module (by restriction). The depth of Q as an R-module is defined in that paper to be the least positive integer n such that Q⊗⋅⋅⋅⊗Q (n times Q, tensor product of R-modules, diagonal action of R from the right) has the same constituent indecomposable modules as Q ⊗⋅⋅⋅⊗ Q (n+1 times Q) (not counting multiplicities, an entirely similar definition for depth of Q as an H-module with closely related results). As a consequence, the depth of R in H is finite if and only if its "generalized quotient module" Q represents an algebraic element in the representation ring (or Green ring) of R. This is the case for example if Q is a projective module, a generator H-module or if Q is a permutation module over a group algebra R (i.e., Q has a basis that is a G-set).In case H is a Hopf algebra that is a semisimple algebra, the depth of Q is the length of the descending chain of annihilator ideals in H of increasing tensor powers of Q, which stabilize on the maximal Hopf ideal within the annihilator ideal, Ann Q = (using a 1967 theorem of Rieffel).
If M is the inclusion matrix (or incidence matrix of the Bratteli diagram) of finite-dimensional semisimple (complex) algebras B and A, the depth two condition on the subalgebra B in A is given by an inequality
MMtM\leqnM
M3
m\geq1
Mm+1\leqnMm-1
G=HCG(X)
B=CS2
A=CS3
In a 2011 article in the Journal of Algebra by R. Boltje, S. Danz and B. Kuelshammer, they provide a simplified and extended definition of the depth of any unital subring B of associative ring A to be 2n+1 if
A ⊗ B … ⊗ BA
m | |
⊕ | |
i=1 |
A ⊗ B … ⊗ BA
d(B,A)
They define a minimum combinatorial depth
dc(H,G)
dc(H,G)=1
G=HCG(H)
d(RH,RG)
dc(H,G)
Main classes of examples of depth two extensions are Galois extensions of algebras being acted upon by groups, Hopf algebras, weak Hopf algebras or Hopf algebroids; for example, suppose a finite group G acts by automorphisms on an algebra A, then A is a depth two extension of its subalgebra B of invariants if the action is G-Galois, explained in detail in the article on Frobenius algebra extension (briefly called Frobenius extensions).
Conversely, any depth two extension A | B has a Galois theory based on the natural action of
End{}BAB
A ⊗ BA
EndAB\congA ⊗ RS
EndA ⊗ BAA
End{}BAB
The Galois theory of a depth two extension is not irrelevant to a depth n > 2 Frobenius extensionsince such a depth n extension embeds in a depth two extension in a tower of iterated endomorphism rings. For example, given a depth three Frobenius extension of ring A over subring B, one can show that the left multiplication monomorphism
λ:B → EndAB, λ(b)(a)=ba
The main theorem in this subject is the following based on algebraic arguments in two of the articles below, published in Advances in Mathematics, that are inspired from the field of operator algebras, subfactors: in particular, somewhat related to A. Ocneanu's definition of depth, his theory of paragroups, and the articles by W. Szymanski, Nikshych-Vainerman, R. Longo and others.
Main Theorem: Suppose an algebra A is a Frobenius extension of a subalgebra B having depth 2, a surjective Frobenius homomorphism and one-dimensional centralizer R, then A is Hopf-Galois extension of B.
The proof of this theorem is a reconstruction theorem, requiring the construction of a Hopf algebra as a minimum, but in most papers done by construction of a nondegenerate pairing of two algebras in the iterated endomorphism algebra tower above B in A, and then a very delicate check that the resulting algebra-coalgebra structure is a Hopf algebra (see for example the article from 2001 below); the method of proof is considerably simplified by the 2003 article cited below (albeit packaged into the definition of Hopf algebroid). The Hopf algebroid structure on the endomorphism ring S of the B-bimodule A (discussed above) becomes a Hopf algebra in the presence of the hypothesis that the centralizer
R=\{r\inA:br=rbforallb\inB\}