Perfect ring


title: "Perfect ring" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["ring-theory"] topic_path: "general/ring-theory" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_ring" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

In the area of abstract algebra known as ring theory, a left perfect ring is a type of ring over which all left modules have projective covers. The right case is defined by analogy, and the condition is not left-right symmetric; that is, there exist rings which are perfect on one side but not the other. Perfect rings were introduced in Bass's book.

A semiperfect ring is a ring over which every finitely generated left module has a projective cover. This property is left-right symmetric.

Perfect ring

Definitions

The following equivalent definitions of a left perfect ring R are found in Anderson and Fuller:

Examples

  • Right or left Artinian rings, and semiprimary rings are known to be right-and-left perfect.
  • The following is an example (due to Bass) of a local ring which is right but not left perfect. Let F be a field, and consider a certain ring of infinite matrices over F. :Take the set of infinite matrices with entries indexed by \mathbb{N} \times \mathbb{N}, and which have only finitely many nonzero entries, all of them above the diagonal, and denote this set by J. Also take the matrix I, with all 1's on the diagonal, and form the set ::R = {f\cdot I+j\mid f\in F, j\in J }, :It can be shown that R is a ring with identity, whose Jacobson radical is J. Furthermore R/J is a field, so that R is local, and R is right but not left perfect.

Properties

For a left perfect ring R:

  • From the equivalences above, every left R-module has a maximal submodule and a projective cover, and the flat left R-modules coincide with the projective left modules.
  • An analogue of the Baer's criterion holds for projective modules.

Semiperfect ring

Definition

Let R be ring. Then R is semiperfect if any of the following equivalent conditions hold:

Examples

Examples of semiperfect rings include:

Properties

Since a ring R is semiperfect iff every simple left R-module has a projective cover, every ring Morita equivalent to a semiperfect ring is also semiperfect.

Citations

References

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ring-theory