Topological module

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In mathematics, a topological module is a module over a topological ring such that scalar multiplication and addition are continuous.

Examples

A topological vector space is a topological module over a topological field. An abelian topological group can be considered as a topological module over , where is the ring of integers with the discrete topology. A topological ring is a topological module over each of its subrings. A more complicated example is the I-adic topology on a ring and its modules. Let I be an ideal of a ring R. The sets of the form x+In for all xR and all positive integers n, form a base for a topology on R that makes R into a topological ring. Then for any left R-module M, the sets of the form x+InM, for all xM and all positive integers n, form a base for a topology on M that makes M into a topological module over the topological ring R.

See also

References

  • Atiyah, Michael Francis; MacDonald, I.G. (1969). Introduction to Commutative Algebra. Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-201-40751-8.
  • Kuz'min, L. V. (1993). "Topological modules". In Hazewinkel, M. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Mathematics. Vol. 9. Kluwer Academic Publishers.