Translation invariant linear spaces of polynomials
Gergely Kiss, Mikl\'os Laczkovich

TL;DR
This paper characterizes translation invariant subspaces of polynomial rings, introduces L-modules, and classifies their structure, including the existence of non-closed submodules, advancing understanding of polynomial module theory.
Contribution
It provides a detailed description of submodules of [x,y], introduces L-modules, and solves a problem about non-closed submodules posed in 2011.
Findings
Proper submodules are sums of M_d and L-modules.
Every indecomposable submodule is either an M_d or an L-module.
Existence of an L-module of order 1 that is not relatively closed.
Abstract
A set of polynomials is called a {\it submodule} of if is a translation invariant linear subspace of . We present a description of the submodules of in terms of a special type of submodules. We say that the submodule of is an {\it L-module of order} if, whenever is such that , then . We show that the proper submodules of are the sums , where , and is an L-module. We give a construction of L-modules parametrized by sequences of complex numbers. A submodule is {\it decomposable} if it is the sum of finitely many proper submodules of . Otherwise is {\it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRings, Modules, and Algebras · Advanced Topics in Algebra · Commutative Algebra and Its Applications
