On generic bricks over tame algebras
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 22:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For tame algebras over algebraically closed fields, a generic module is a generic brick exactly when it determines a one-parameter family of bricks with the same dimension.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
If Λ is a tame finite-dimensional algebra over an algebraically closed field and G is a generic Λ-module, then G is a generic brick if and only if it determines a one-parameter family of bricks with the same dimension. In particular, Λ admits a generic brick if and only if Λ is brick-continuous.
What carries the argument
The one-parameter family of bricks of fixed dimension determined by the generic module.
If this is right
- A tame algebra admits generic bricks precisely when it is brick-continuous.
- Generic modules that parametrize constant-dimension brick families are exactly the generic bricks.
- Brick-continuity of the algebra is the decisive property controlling the existence of generic bricks.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The criterion may let researchers decide brick-continuity for concrete tame algebras by inspecting known one-parameter families.
- Analogous links between generic objects and constant-dimension families could be sought in categories of modules over non-tame algebras.
- The result isolates brick-continuity as a property worth checking before constructing generic modules in new examples.
Load-bearing premise
The standard definitions of generic module, generic brick, and brick-continuous used in the literature on tame algebras make the stated equivalence hold when the algebra is tame and the field is algebraically closed.
What would settle it
A tame algebra over an algebraically closed field together with a generic module that is a generic brick but does not determine any one-parameter family of bricks of the same dimension.
read the original abstract
We prove that if ${\Lambda}$ is a tame finite-dimensional algebra over an algebraically closed field and $G$ is a generic ${\Lambda}-$module, then $G$ is a generic brick if and only if it determines a one-parameter family of bricks with the same dimension. In particular, we obtain that ${\Lambda}$ admits a generic brick if and only if ${\Lambda}$ is brick-continuous.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proves that if Λ is a tame finite-dimensional algebra over an algebraically closed field and G is a generic Λ-module, then G is a generic brick if and only if it determines a one-parameter family of bricks with the same dimension. In particular, Λ admits a generic brick if and only if Λ is brick-continuous.
Significance. If the equivalence holds, the result gives a concrete characterization of generic bricks in terms of one-parameter families for tame algebras, directly tying the existence of generic bricks to the brick-continuity property. This could streamline checks in the representation theory of tame algebras by reducing the generic-brick question to a family-existence condition using only standard notions from the literature (e.g., Crawley-Boevey).
major comments (1)
- The manuscript consists solely of the stated theorem in the abstract; no definitions of the key terms (generic module, generic brick, brick-continuous), no derivation of the if-and-only-if equivalence, and no supporting arguments or references to prior results are supplied. Without these, the central claim cannot be verified.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and constructive comments. We address the major concern below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate the necessary additions.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The manuscript consists solely of the stated theorem in the abstract; no definitions of the key terms (generic module, generic brick, brick-continuous), no derivation of the if-and-only-if equivalence, and no supporting arguments or references to prior results are supplied. Without these, the central claim cannot be verified.
Authors: We acknowledge that the submitted manuscript is a concise note consisting only of the theorem statement. In the revised version, we will expand the paper to include precise definitions of generic module, generic brick, and brick-continuous (drawing on standard references such as Crawley-Boevey's work on generic modules), a complete derivation of the stated if-and-only-if equivalence, supporting arguments, and citations to the relevant prior literature on tame algebras and one-parameter families. This will enable full verification of the claim. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation self-contained
full rationale
The paper proves an if-and-only-if equivalence for tame algebras over algebraically closed fields: a generic module G is a generic brick precisely when it parametrizes a one-parameter family of same-dimension bricks, with the corollary that generic bricks exist iff the algebra is brick-continuous. The statement invokes only the standard definitions of generic module, generic brick, and brick-continuity already present in the literature (Crawley-Boevey and related works on tame algebras). No equation, definition, or step is shown to reduce to itself by construction, no parameter is fitted and then relabeled a prediction, and no load-bearing premise rests on a self-citation chain. The result is therefore a direct consequence of the external definitions once the one-parameter-family condition is imposed, with no internal circular reduction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AbsoluteFloorClosure.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Theorem 1.2: G generic brick iff infinitely many M(λ) are bricks; Corollary 1.3: Λ brick-continuous iff admits generic brick. Proof via minimal ditalgebra B, functor F : B-Mod → P¹(Λ), radical factorizations through γt and S(Λet).
-
IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
Use of realizations M over Γ = k[x]_h and one-parameter families M(λ) = M ⊗ Γ Γ/(x−λ).
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
- [1]
-
[2]
M. Auslander, I. Reiten, S.O. Smalø. Representation Theory of A rtin Al- gebras. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Math. 36, Cambridge Univer sity Press 1997
work page 1997
-
[3]
R. Bautista, L. Salmer´ on, and R. Zuazua. Differential Tensor A lgebras and their Module Categories. London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser ies 362. Cambridge University Press, 2009
work page 2009
-
[4]
L. Bodnarchuk and Yu. Drozd, One class of wild but brick-tame matrix problems. Journal of Algebra (2010), 3004–3019
work page 2010
-
[5]
W.W. Crawley-Boevey. On tame algebras and bocses. Proc. London Math. Soc. (3) 56 (1988) 451–483
work page 1988
-
[6]
W.W. Crawley-Boevey. Tame algebras and generic modules. Proc. London Math. Soc. (3) 63 (1991) 241–265
work page 1991
-
[7]
W.W. Crawley-Boevey. Modules of finite length over their endomorphism rings, in: S. Brenner, H. Tachikawa (Eds.), Representations of Algebra s and Related Topics, in: London Math. Soc. Lect. Notes Series, 168 , 1992, 127–184
work page 1992
-
[8]
W.W. Crawley-Boevey. Tameness of biserial algebras. Arch. Math. 65 (1995) 399–407
work page 1995
-
[9]
Yu. A. Drozd. Tame and wild matrix problems. Representations and quadratic forms. [Institute of Mathematics, Academy of Sciences , Ukra- nian SSR, Kiev (1979) 39–74] Amer. Math. Soc. Transl. 128 (1986) 31–55
work page 1979
-
[10]
S. Kasjan. Auslander-Reiten Sequences under Base Field Extension . Pro- ceedings of the American Mathematical Society, Vol. 128, No. 10 (2 000) 2885–2896
-
[11]
H. Krauze. Krull–Schmidt categories and projective covers . Expo. Math. 33 (2015) 535–549
work page 2015
-
[12]
K. Mousavand, C. Paquette. Minimal ( τ -)tilting infinite algebras. Nagoya Mathematical Journal 249 (2023) 221–238
work page 2023
-
[13]
K. Mousavand, C. Paquette. Biserial Algebras and Generic Bricks. arXiv:2209.05696v1[math.RT]13-Sep-2022
-
[14]
K. Mousavand, C. Paquette. Hom-Orthogonal Modules and Brick-Brauer- Thrall Conjectures. arXiv:2407.20877v1 [math.RT] 30-jul-2024
-
[15]
C.M. Ringel. The spectrum of a finite dimensional algebra. Proceedings of a conference on Ring Theory, Antwerp 1978. Dekker, New York, 1 979
work page 1978
-
[16]
C.M. Ringel. Tame Algebras and Integral Quadratic Forms. Sprin ger- Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, Tokyo, 1984. 40
work page 1984
-
[17]
A.V. Roiter, M.M. Kleiner. Representations of differential graded cate- gories. Springer Lect. Notes in Math. 488 (1975) 316–339. R. Bautista Centro de Ciencias Matem´ aticas Universidad Nacional Aut´ onoma de M´ exico Morelia, M´ exico raymundo@matmor.unam.mx E. P´ erez Facultad de Matem´ aticas Universidad Aut´ onoma de Yucat´ an M´ erida, M´ exico jpere...
work page 1975
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.