This is a well known lemma that consistently appears in textbooks, either as a statement without pro

Mabel Breault

Mabel Breault

Answered question

2022-01-13

This is a well known lemma that consistently appears in textbooks, either as a statement without proof, or as an exercise.
If 0 id A f B g C h 0 is a short exact sequence of finitely generated abelian groups, then
rank B=rank A+rank C
I've been trying to prove this unsuccessfully.
What do we know? f is injective, g is surjective,
Imf=kerg, Img=kerh, C=BA
So I start with a maximally linearly independent subset {aα} of A such that the sum (with only finite non-zero entries)
nαaα=0
for nαZ, implies that nα=0
Where to go from here is a puzzle?

Answer & Explanation

porschomcl

porschomcl

Beginner2022-01-14Added 28 answers

Step 1
If youre
Annie Levasseur

Annie Levasseur

Beginner2022-01-15Added 30 answers

Step 1
This holds for integral domains R and finitely generated R-modules. If we put A=M1, B=M2, and C=M3, then the given short exact sequence is isomorphic to the following short exact sequence:
0M1M2M2M10
If r1=rank M1, r2=rank M2, and r3=rank M3=rankM2M1, then let u1,,ur1 be linearly independent in M1 and v1,,vr3 be linearly independent in M2M1 Then, if
a1u1++ar1ur1+b1v1++br3vr3=0,
in M, then reducing this equation modulo M1 gives
b1v1++br3vr3=0 in M2M1
So b1==br3=0SKbyleardependenceoftheseements,andthusPSKa1==ar1=0 by linear independence of the ui. Hence rank M2r1+r3
Suppose that w1,,ws are linearly independent in M2 with s>r1+r3. Now (exercise) there is a free submodule NM1M2M1 with Rr3=NM1

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