I am interested in the following situation.
Let $p, q$ be two distinct primes.
Let $G$ be an elementary Abelian p-group, say $G = G_1 \oplus \cdots \oplus G_\ell$ for cyclic groups $G_i$ of order $p$, $\ell \geq 1$.
Now consider the group ring $\mathbb F_q[G]$. I am interested in the structure of this ring. What I already found about this is the following:
(1) $\mathbb F_q[G]$ is a semisimple, commutative ring due to Maschke's Theorem and it can be written as a direct sum of finite fields.
Moreover, these fields have to be of characteristic q.
(2) Since $G$ is finite and Abelian, $\mathbb F_q[G]$ is a finite commutative ring, and can thus be decomposed into local rings
$$\mathbb F_q[G] = e_0\mathbb F_q[G] \oplus \cdots \oplus e_k\mathbb F_q[G],$$
for certain idempotent, non-trivial, pairwise orthogonal elements $e_i$.
First question: I guess (1) implies that these local rings are finite fields?
My main question is the following: Is there any way in which the size of the finite fields in the decomposition of $\mathbb F_q[G]$ can be bounded, in terms of $p,q$ only and independent of $\ell$? How do these finite fields look like? They are of the form $\mathbb F_q[X]/f(X)$, but where does the polynomial $f$ come from in this particular case? Or in other words, is there a simple way to express the elements $e_i$ in the decomposition into local rings? In which way does the decomposition of $G$ into cyclic $p$-groups occur in the decomposition of $\mathbb F_q[G]$?
I am very grateful for hints and ideas about any of these points. Thanks a lot!
This is true, but it doesn't give you any new information. The decomposition into a finite product of fields is already a finite product of local rings.
This recent question will be helpful, since all of the fields in the decomposition are in fact representatives of the simple modules for the group ring.
Every field $F$ appearing in the decomposition must satisfy $\dim_{\mathbb F_{q}}(F)<|G|$, and the size of $F$ is, obviously, $|F|=|\mathbb F_q|^{\dim_{\mathbb F_{q}}(F)}$
I guess you are aware of the fact that for any subgroup $H$ of $G$, $\frac{1}{|H|}\sum_{h\in H}h$ is an idempotent of the group ring. So, knowing about the subgroup structure of elementary abelian $p$-groups is going to give you idempotents.