Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Modules
- Part II Functors
- 10 Finitely presented functors
- 11 Serre subcategories and localisation
- 12 The Ziegler spectrum and injective functors
- 13 Dimensions
- 14 The Zariski spectrum and the sheaf of definable scalars
- 15 Artin algebras
- 16 Finitely accessible and presentable additive categories
- 17 Spectra of triangulated categories
- Appendix B Languages for definable categories
- Appendix C A model theory/functor category dictionary
- Part III Definable categories
- Appendix D Model theory of modules: an update
- Appendix E Some definitions
- Main examples
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Serre subcategories and localisation
from Part II - Functors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Modules
- Part II Functors
- 10 Finitely presented functors
- 11 Serre subcategories and localisation
- 12 The Ziegler spectrum and injective functors
- 13 Dimensions
- 14 The Zariski spectrum and the sheaf of definable scalars
- 15 Artin algebras
- 16 Finitely accessible and presentable additive categories
- 17 Spectra of triangulated categories
- Appendix B Languages for definable categories
- Appendix C A model theory/functor category dictionary
- Part III Definable categories
- Appendix D Model theory of modules: an update
- Appendix E Some definitions
- Main examples
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The chapter begins with a summary of the basic definitions and results on localisation in general abelian categories then gradually moves to finite type localisation in locally coherent categories. The latter is essential for the functorial approach to results which involve relativising to closed subsets of the Ziegler spectrum, that is, to relativising to definable subcategories of the module category. Both localisation of large (Grothendieck) categories at hereditary torsion theories and localisation of possibly small (abelian) categories at Serre subcategories are discussed.
Localisation in Grothendieck categories
Section 11.1.1 gives the definitions and basic results around localisation at hereditary torsion theories. Finite-type localisation, especially in locally finitely generated categories, is the subject of Section 11.1.2 and elementary localisation, especially in locally finitely presented categories, is the subject of Section 11.1.3. Still stronger results hold for finite-type localisation in locally coherent categories (Section 11.1.4).
In Section 11.1.5 the effect of localisation on pp conditions is described.
Localisation
The localisation process is described and the main summative results stated: 11.1.1 on equivalent data defining a localisation; 11.1.3 characterising localisation functors; 11.1.5 on the effect of localisation.
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- Information
- Purity, Spectra and Localisation , pp. 459 - 491Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009