In 1898 Frobenius discovered a construction which, in present terminology, associates with every module of a subgroup the induced module of a group. This construction proved to be of fundamental importance and is one of the basic tools in the entire theory of group representations.This monograph is designed for research mathematicians and advanced graduate students and gives a picture of the general theory of induced modules as it exists at present. Much of the material has until now been available only in research articles. The approach is not intended to be encyclopedic, rather each topic is considered in sufficient depth that the reader may obtain a clear idea of the major results in the area.After establishing algebraic preliminaries, the general facts about induced modules are provided, as well as some of their formal properties, annihilators and applications. The remaining chapters include detailed information on the process of induction from normal subgroups, projective summands of induced modules, some basic results of the Green theory with refinements and extensions, simple induction and restriction pairs and permutation modules. The final chapter is based exclusively on the work of Weiss, presenting a number of applications to the isomorphism problem for group rings.
Author(s): Gregory Karpilovsky (Eds.)
Series: North-Holland Mathematics Studies 161
Publisher: Elsevier, Academic Press
Year: 1990
Language: English
Pages: iii-viii, 1-520
Content:
Edited by
Page iii
Copyright page
Page iv
Dedication
Page v
Preface
Pages vii-viii
Chapter 1 Preliminaries
Pages 1-44
Chapter 2 General properties of induced modules
Pages 45-129
Chapter 3 Induction from normal subgroups
Pages 131-272
Chapter 4 Projective summands of induced modules
Pages 273-297
Chapter 5 Green theory
Pages 299-340
Chapter 6 Simple induction and restriction pairs
Pages 341-382
Chapter 7 Permutation modules
Pages 383-458
Chapter 8 Permutation lattices
Pages 459-498
Bibliography
Pages 499-510
Notation
Pages 511-515
Index
Pages 516-520