If R is any ring, is defined considering R as a right module, and in this case is a two-sided ideal of R called the right singular ideal of R. The left handed analogue is defined similarly. It is possible for .
Definitions
Here are several definitions used when studying singular submodules and singular ideals.
In the following, M is an R-module:
M is called a singular module if .
M is called a nonsingular module if .
R is called right nonsingular if . A left nonsingular ring is defined similarly, using the left singular ideal, and it is entirely possible for a ring to be right-but-not-left nonsingular.
In rings with unity it is always the case that , and so "right singular ring" is not usually defined the same way as singular modules are. Some authors have used "singular ring" to mean "has a nonzero singular ideal", however this usage is not consistent with the usage of the adjectives for modules.
Properties
Some general properties of the singular submodule include:
The singular ideals of a ring contain central nilpotent elements of the ring. Consequently, the singular ideal of a commutative ring contains the nilradical of the ring.
A general property of the torsion submodule is that , but this does not necessarily hold for the singular submodule. However, if R is a right nonsingular ring, then .
If N is an essential submodule of M (both right modules) then M/N is singular. If M is a free module, or if R is right nonsingular, then the converse is true.
Right nonsingularity has a strong interaction with right self injective rings as well.
Theorem: If R is a right self injective ring, then the following conditions on R are equivalent: right nonsingular, von Neumann regular, right semihereditary, right Rickart, Baer, semiprimitive. (Lam 1999, p. 262)
The paper (Zelmanowitz 1983) used nonsingular modules to characterize the class of rings whose maximal right ring of quotients have a certain structure.
Theorem: If R is a ring, then is a right full linear ring if and only if R has a nonsingular, faithful, uniform module. Moreover, is a finite direct product of full linear rings if and only if R has a nonsingular, faithful module with finite uniform dimension.
Textbooks
Goodearl, K. R. (1976), Ring theory: Nonsingular rings and modules, Pure and Applied Mathematics, No. 33, New York: Marcel Dekker Inc., pp. viii+206, MR0429962
Zelmanowitz, J. M. (1983), "The structure of rings with faithful nonsingular modules", Trans. Amer. Math. Soc., 278 (1): 347–359, doi:10.2307/1999320, ISSN0002-9947, MR0697079