Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised May 27, 2026

Dual module

In mathematics, the dual module of a left (respectively right) module M over a ring R is the set of left (respectively right) R-module homomorphisms from M to R with the pointwise right (respectively left) module structure. The dual module is typically denoted M∗ or HomR(M, R).

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In mathematics, the dual module of a left (respectively right) module M over a ring R is the set of left (respectively right) R-module homomorphisms from M to R with the pointwise right (respectively left) module structure.12 The dual module is typically denoted M or HomR(M, R).

If the base ring R is a field, then a dual module is a dual vector space.

Every module has a canonical homomorphism to the dual of its dual (called the double dual). A reflexive module is one for which the canonical homomorphism is an isomorphism. A torsionless module is one for which the canonical homomorphism is injective.

Example: If G = Spec ( A ) {\displaystyle G=\operatorname {Spec} (A)} is a finite commutative group scheme represented by a Hopf algebra A over a commutative ring R, then the Cartier dual G D {\displaystyle G^{D}} is the Spec of the dual R-module of A.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Nicolas Bourbaki (1974). Algebra I. Springer. ISBN 9783540193739.
  2. Serge Lang (2002). Algebra. Springer. ISBN 978-0387953854.