Totally acyclic complexes and homological invariants over arbitrary rings
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 00:57 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Over any ring, every acyclic complex of projectives, injectives or flats being totally acyclic is equivalent to equalities among the invariants silp, spli and sfli and characterizes Iwanaga-Gorenstein rings in the non-commutative case.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For an arbitrary ring R the conditions that every acyclic complex of projective modules is totally acyclic, that every acyclic complex of injective modules is totally acyclic, and that every acyclic complex of flat modules is totally acyclic are equivalent to one another and to the coincidence or finiteness of the invariants silp(R), spli(R) and sfli(R); these equivalences extend the commutative characterizations of Iwanaga-Gorenstein rings and supply additional equivalent statements for the Nakayama conjecture.
What carries the argument
The distinction between acyclic complexes and totally acyclic complexes of projective, injective and flat modules, together with the three homological invariants silp(R), spli(R) and sfli(R).
If this is right
- spli(R) equals silp(R) whenever the listed sufficient conditions on the ring hold.
- The non-commutative Iwanaga-Gorenstein property admits several new equivalent formulations in terms of totally acyclic complexes.
- The Nakayama conjecture receives additional equivalent characterizations via the same complex conditions.
- The three invariants silp, spli and sfli are tied together by the single requirement that acyclic complexes are totally acyclic.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same pattern of equivalences may be testable for other classes of complexes or for higher homological dimensions.
- Results previously known only for commutative rings can now be re-examined directly in the non-commutative setting without extra hypotheses.
- The link to the Nakayama conjecture suggests that computational checks of the invariants could decide the conjecture for specific families of algebras.
Load-bearing premise
The usual definitions and functorial properties of acyclic and totally acyclic complexes continue to make sense and behave as expected when the ring is allowed to be non-commutative.
What would settle it
A concrete non-commutative ring R together with an explicit acyclic complex of projectives that is not totally acyclic, yet silp(R) equals spli(R) and the ring satisfies the other listed conditions.
read the original abstract
In this paper, we investigate equivalent characterizations of the condition that every acyclic complex of projective, injective, or flat modules is totally acyclic over a general ring R. We provide examples to illustrate relationships among these conditions and show that several are closely tied to the homological invariants silp(R), spli(R) and sfli(R). We also give sufficient conditions for the equality spli(R) = silp(R), thereby refining results due to Ballas-Chatzistavridis and Wang-Yang. Further, we extend a result of Christensen-Foxby-Holm on characterizations of Iwanaga-Gorenstein rings to the non-commutative setting. This generalizes a theorem of Estrada-Fu-Iacob, offering additional equivalent characterizations under a general assumption while also yielding characterizations of the Nakayama conjecture.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper investigates equivalent characterizations of the condition that every acyclic complex of projective, injective, or flat modules over an arbitrary ring R is totally acyclic. It relates these conditions to the invariants silp(R), spli(R), and sfli(R), provides examples, gives sufficient conditions for spli(R) = silp(R) that refine prior results, and extends characterizations of Iwanaga-Gorenstein rings from Christensen-Foxby-Holm to the non-commutative setting while generalizing Estrada-Fu-Iacob and yielding characterizations of the Nakayama conjecture.
Significance. If the central equivalences hold for arbitrary rings, the work provides a useful non-commutative extension of standard results in homological algebra, with concrete ties to well-studied invariants and the Nakayama conjecture. The examples and sufficient conditions for equality of invariants add practical value, and the generalization beyond commutative cases broadens applicability to general ring theory.
major comments (2)
- [§4, Theorem 4.3] §4, Theorem 4.3 (extension of Christensen-Foxby-Holm): the proof that acyclicity of Hom(P, I) implies total acyclicity for arbitrary R invokes functorial properties of Hom and tensor without explicitly verifying that left/right module asymmetries do not obstruct the transfer of exactness from the commutative case; this is load-bearing for the non-commutative claim.
- [§5, Proposition 5.1] §5, Proposition 5.1 (characterizations of Nakayama conjecture): the equivalence between the totally acyclic condition and the conjecture is stated under a 'general assumption' whose precise statement and verification for non-Noetherian rings is not detailed, weakening the claimed additional characterizations.
minor comments (2)
- [§2] Notation for left/right modules is occasionally ambiguous in §2; explicit use of _R or R_ subscripts would improve clarity.
- [Theorem 3.2] The statement of Theorem 3.2 cites Ballas-Chatzistavridis but does not indicate which of their results is being refined by the new sufficient condition for spli = silp.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading of the manuscript and the constructive comments. We respond to each major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [§4, Theorem 4.3] §4, Theorem 4.3 (extension of Christensen-Foxby-Holm): the proof that acyclicity of Hom(P, I) implies total acyclicity for arbitrary R invokes functorial properties of Hom and tensor without explicitly verifying that left/right module asymmetries do not obstruct the transfer of exactness from the commutative case; this is load-bearing for the non-commutative claim.
Authors: The proof of Theorem 4.3 is written for an arbitrary associative unital ring R and explicitly tracks left and right module structures: projective complexes are taken in the category of right R-modules while injective complexes are taken in the category of left R-modules (or vice versa, depending on the Hom or tensor functor under consideration). The exactness transfer uses only the general adjointness isomorphism Hom_R(M ⊗_R N, P) ≅ Hom_R(M, Hom_R(N, P)) and the fact that Hom_R(-, I) is exact when I is injective, both of which hold without commutativity. Nevertheless, to remove any ambiguity about the passage from the commutative case, we will insert a short clarifying paragraph immediately after the statement of the theorem that records the precise module categories and confirms that no additional commutativity is used. revision: partial
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Referee: [§5, Proposition 5.1] §5, Proposition 5.1 (characterizations of Nakayama conjecture): the equivalence between the totally acyclic condition and the conjecture is stated under a 'general assumption' whose precise statement and verification for non-Noetherian rings is not detailed, weakening the claimed additional characterizations.
Authors: The general assumption in Proposition 5.1 is the standing hypothesis, introduced at the beginning of Section 5, that every acyclic complex of projective (respectively injective or flat) modules is totally acyclic; this is precisely the condition whose equivalent characterizations are developed in Sections 3 and 4. Because the definitions of silp(R), spli(R) and sfli(R) make sense for any ring and the proofs in Section 5 invoke only these definitions together with the adjointness and exactness properties already established for arbitrary rings, the equivalences hold without any Noetherian hypothesis. To address the referee’s concern we will (i) restate the assumption verbatim inside the proposition and (ii) add a one-sentence verification that the argument remains valid when R is non-Noetherian. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: derivations rely on external prior theorems and standard definitions
full rationale
The paper extends characterizations from Christensen-Foxby-Holm and Estrada-Fu-Iacob to non-commutative rings using standard definitions of acyclic/totally acyclic complexes, silp/spli/sfli invariants, and functorial properties of Hom and tensor. These are invoked as established in the literature rather than redefined or fitted within the paper. No step reduces a claimed equivalence or prediction to a quantity defined from the paper's own inputs or self-citations; the central claims build on cited external results without self-referential closure. The derivation chain remains independent of the present work's equations.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Projective, injective, and flat modules over an arbitrary ring R form complexes whose acyclicity and total acyclicity are well-defined via standard Hom and tensor functors.
- domain assumption The invariants silp(R), spli(R), and sfli(R) are defined as suprema of appropriate homological dimensions and are comparable across arbitrary rings.
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