Abstract algebra - direct sum and direct product

Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the differences and similarities between direct sums and direct products in the context of group theory, particularly focusing on abelian groups and Z-modules. Participants explore definitions, examples, and implications of these concepts, as well as their relationships to matrices.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that direct sum is a concept primarily associated with modules over a ring, while direct product pertains to the construction of abelian groups.
  • There is a claim that for Z-modules, direct product and direct sum may be viewed as equivalent, but definitions differ when considering matrices.
  • One participant states that the direct product of matrices is defined as the tensor product, while the direct sum is described differently, raising questions about their equivalence in Z-modules.
  • Another participant explains that both direct sum and direct product can be seen as solutions to universal mapping problems, noting that the resulting groups are isomorphic but the maps differ.
  • A clarification is provided that the direct sum of groups consists of sequences with finitely many non-identity terms, while the direct product includes all sequences.
  • One participant argues that the definitions of direct sum and direct product are essentially the same for finite groups, differing only in terminology (addition vs. multiplication).
  • Another participant emphasizes that the distinction becomes significant when dealing with infinite products and sums.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relationship between direct sums and direct products, particularly in the context of Z-modules and matrices. There is no consensus on the definitions or implications of these concepts, especially regarding their equivalence in various contexts.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight that the discussion may depend on the definitions used and the context of finite versus infinite cases, which could affect the understanding of direct sums and direct products.

markoX
Messages
28
Reaction score
0
Hi everybody,
I'm new to absract algebra and I really can not understand different between direct sum and direct product in group theory (specially abelian groups).
could does anyone give me a clear example or ... ?
thanks
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I think that direct sum refers to modules over a ring. One takes a direct product of abelian groups to get another abelian group. But if you view an abelian group as a Z-module then the direct product is the direct sum of Z-modules.
 
thanks for reply,
Do you mean direct product and direct sum are the same for Z-modules?
but how do their definition are different for two matrices A and B as you know?
 
markoX said:
thanks for reply,
Do you mean direct product and direct sum are the same for Z-modules?
but how do their definition are different for two matrices A and B as you know?

I think it is a direct product if you view the groups as groups, a direct sum if you view them as Z-modules. They are not really the same because they are being view as different types of objects.

I don't understand you matrix question. Can you explain it more?
 
My second question is not related to group theory, suppose we have two matrices A and B. The direct product of these two matrices is A * B ( which is tensor product ) but the direct sum is something else.
how do these two objects can be same in Z-modules group?
 
Each of these (direct sum, direct product) is the solution of a certain universal mapping problem. In the case of abelian groups, the resulting groups are isomorphic, but not the resulting maps.

For the "direct sum": given two abelian groups A, B you get the direct sum group A \times B and two embeddings, i_1 \colon A \to A \times B and i_2 \colon B \to A \times B.

For the "direct product": given two abelian groups A, B you get the direct product group A \times B and two projections, p_1 \colon A \times B \to A and p_2 \colon A \times B \to B.
 
markoX said:
My second question is not related to group theory, suppose we have two matrices A and B. The direct product of these two matrices is A * B ( which is tensor product ) but the direct sum is something else.
how do these two objects can be same in Z-modules group?

I have never heard the tensor product called a direct product. If that is what your book says then this to me is non-standard terminology.

The direct sum of two matrices(linear maps) act on the direct sum of the two vector spaces - the tensor product acts on the tensor product of the vector spaces. If the 2 vector spaces have dimensions m and n then the dirct sum has dimension m + n , the tensor product has dimension mxn.
 
In mathematics, the direct sum of groups: \Pi_{i\in I} G_i is the set of all "sequences" (x_i)_{i\in I} such that x_i\in G_i for all i\in I. The direct sum \bigoplus_{i\in I}G_i is the subset of the direct product consisting of the sequences with all except finitely many terms equal to the identities of the relevant groups. Thus, if I is finite the direct product is the same as the the direct sum .
 
Sounds like most of you are making it more complicated than it needs to be. Either that or I have misunderstood something. I guess I'll find out now. Here's how I would define those terms:

If G and H are groups, then the direct product of G and H is the Cartesian product G×H with the multiplication operation defined by (g,h)(g',h')=(gg',hh').

The direct sum is exactly the same thing. The only difference is that when we're dealing with Abelian groups, we often use the notation g+g' instead of gg'. When we do, the definition of the "multiplication" operation on G×H is written as (g,h)+(g',h')=(g+g',h+h') instead of as above. It's still the same definition, but now we call the operation "addition" instead of "multiplication".

...and I see now that this thread is more than 6 months old.
 
Last edited:
  • #10
@Fredrik: as Nessy said, for finite products/sums, there is no difference between direct sum and direct product. You are talking about two (=finitely many) groups G and H, so you're right.

The difference comes up when dealing with infinite products and sums, i.e. \prod_{i\in I}G_i and \bigoplus_{i\in I}G_i, where I is an infinite index set.

\\edit: also, see here.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
991
  • · Replies 19 ·
Replies
19
Views
3K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
3K
  • · Replies 19 ·
Replies
19
Views
4K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
5K
  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • · Replies 17 ·
Replies
17
Views
9K