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  2. Direct sum of groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_sum_of_groups

    The group operation in the external direct sum is pointwise multiplication, as in the usual direct product. This subset does indeed form a group, and for a finite set of groups {H i} the external direct sum is equal to the direct product. If G = ΣH i, then G is isomorphic to Σ E {H i}. Thus, in a sense, the direct sum is an "internal ...

  3. Direct sum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_sum

    For an arbitrary family of groups indexed by , their direct sum [2] is the subgroup of the direct product that consists of the elements () that have finite support, where by definition, () is said to have finite support if is the identity element of for all but finitely many . [3] The direct sum of an infinite family () of non-trivial groups is ...

  4. Direct product of groups - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_product_of_groups

    In mathematics, specifically in group theory, the direct product is an operation that takes two groups G and H and constructs a new group, usually denoted G × H.This operation is the group-theoretic analogue of the Cartesian product of sets and is one of several important notions of direct product in mathematics.

  5. Direct sum of modules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_sum_of_modules

    Direct sums are commutative and associative (up to isomorphism), meaning that it doesn't matter in which order one forms the direct sum. The abelian group of R-linear homomorphisms from the direct sum to some left R-module L is naturally isomorphic to the direct product of the abelian groups of R-linear homomorphisms from M i to L: ⁡ (,) ⁡ (,).

  6. Disjoint union (topology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disjoint_union_(topology)

    In general topology and related areas of mathematics, the disjoint union (also called the direct sum, free union, free sum, topological sum, or coproduct) of a family of topological spaces is a space formed by equipping the disjoint union of the underlying sets with a natural topology called the disjoint union topology. Roughly speaking, in the ...

  7. Direct product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_product

    The direct sum and direct product are not isomorphic for infinite indices, where the elements of a direct sum are zero for all but for a finite number of entries. They are dual in the sense of category theory: the direct sum is the coproduct, while the direct product is the product.

  8. Coproduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coproduct

    The coproduct in the category of sets is simply the disjoint union with the maps i j being the inclusion maps.Unlike direct products, coproducts in other categories are not all obviously based on the notion for sets, because unions don't behave well with respect to preserving operations (e.g. the union of two groups need not be a group), and so coproducts in different categories can be ...

  9. Free abelian group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_abelian_group

    As well as the direct sum, another way to combine free abelian groups is to use the tensor product of -modules. The tensor product of two free abelian groups is always free abelian, with a basis that is the Cartesian product of the bases for the two groups in the product. [22]