What is a formal model for equations in non-commutative ring? The standard formal modeling for polynomials is the polynomial ring R[X_1,...,X_n] which is a monoid ring R[N^n] over an rng R.

Emilio Calhoun

Emilio Calhoun

Answered question

2022-10-28

What is a formal model for equations in non-commutative ring?
The standard formal modeling for polynomials is the polynomial ring R [ X 1 , . . . , X n ] which is a monoid ring R[Nn] over an rng R.
Under this construction, it is possible to commute X i 's so that X i X j = X j X i .
However, over a non-commutative ring, we need more than this.
For example, say we want to find a solution ( x 1 , x 2 , x 3 ) of a equation a X 1 X 2 2 X 3 + b X 3 X 1 X 2 = 0 over a non-commutative ring.
If we want to find 3-tuples in the center of the ring, then the standard polynomial ring can be used to find the solutions. However, in general, we don't want X i 's to commute. For example, we want ( X 1 X 2 2 X 3 ) ( X 3 X 1 ) = X 1 X 2 2 X 3 2 X 1 . Moreover, if there is a formal model for polynomials, it always form a ring.
Consquently, rather than N n , we need somewhat more complex structure.
Say, R[M] is a monoid ring over R and it is a correct model of polynomial rings.
Then, M should have information about how variables are ordered and what the powers of each variable in a term are. What would M be?
Is there a way to construct polynomials in non-commutative rings?

Answer & Explanation

Kaylee Evans

Kaylee Evans

Beginner2022-10-29Added 20 answers

Step 1
The tensor "algebra" of a free (R,R)-bimodule should work. I put the term in quotes because it is not an R-algebra, but rather an R-ring (i.e. multiplication by elements of R makes sense but R is not central).
This ring is the direct sum of tensor powers of the free bimodule, where we use the bimodule tensor product. Multiplication is given by taking tensor products. Considering the free bimodule to be generated by the variables x 1 , x 2 , , x n , this ring can be explicitly described additively as the bimodule generated by products of the form
r 1 x i 1 r 2 x i 2 x i n 1 r n x i n r n + 1
Step 2
Technically this is only a generating set if R is unital, but the modification for nonunital rings, while possibly notationally ugly, is not a big deal.
This behaves like a polynomial ring in that the variables can be specialized by substituting elements of R, and this substitution yields a homomorphism into R.

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