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In [[algebra]], given an [[algebraic group]] ''G'', a [[group representation|''G''-module]] ''M'' and a ''G''-algebra ''A'', all over a [[field (mathematics)|field]] ''k'', the '''module of covariants''' of type ''M'' is the <math>A^G</math>-module▼
▲In algebra, given an algebraic group ''G'', a ''G''-module ''M'' and a ''G''-algebra ''A'', the '''module of covariants''' of type ''M'' is the <math>A^G</math>-module
: <math>(M \otimes_k A)^G.</math>
where <math>-^G</math> refers to taking the elements fixed by the action of ''G''; thus, <math>A^G</math> is the [[ring of invariants]] of ''A''.
== See also ==
*[[
== References ==
* M. Brion, ''Sur les modules de covariants'', Ann. Sci. École Norm. Sup. (4) 26 (1993), 1 21.
* M. Van den Bergh, ''Modules of covariants'', Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. 1, 2 (Zurich, 1994), Birkhauser, Basel, pp. 352–362, 1995.
[[Category:Module theory]]
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▲{{linear-algebra-stub}}
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