Semimodule

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In mathematics, a semimodule over a semiring R is like a module over a ring except that it is only a commutative monoid rather than an abelian group.

Definition

Formally, a left R-semimodule consists of an additively-written commutative monoid M and a map from R×M to M satisfying the following axioms:

  1. r(m+n)=rm+rn
  2. (r+s)m=rm+sm
  3. (rs)m=r(sm)
  4. 1m=m
  5. 0Rm=r0M=0M.

A right R-semimodule can be defined similarly. For modules over a ring, the last axiom follows from the others. This is not the case with semimodules.

Examples

If R is a ring, then any R-module is an R-semimodule. Conversely, it follows from the second, fourth, and last axioms that (-1)m is an additive inverse of m for all mM, so any semimodule over a ring is in fact a module. Any semiring is a left and right semimodule over itself in the same way that a ring is a left and right module over itself. Every commutative monoid is uniquely an -semimodule in the same way that an abelian group is a -module.

References

Golan, Jonathan S. (1999), "Semimodules over semirings", Semirings and their Applications (Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands): pp. 149–161, ISBN 978-90-481-5252-0, http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-9333-5_14, retrieved 2022-02-22