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Semigroup

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In mathematics, a semigroup is an algebraic structure consisting of a nonempty set S together with an associative binary operation. In other words, a semigroup is an associative magma. The terminology is derived from the anterior notion of a group. A semigroup differs from a group in that for each of its elements there may not exist an inverse; further, there may not exist an identity element.

The binary operation of a semigroup is most often denoted multiplicatively: , or simply xy, denotes the result of applying the semigroup operation to the ordered pair (xy).

The formal study of semigroups began in the early 20th century. Semigroups are important in many areas of mathematics because they are the abstract algebraic underpinning of "memoryless" systems: time-dependent systems that start from scratch at each iteration. In applied mathematics, semigroups are fundamental models for linear time-invariant systems. In partial differential equations, a semigroup is associated to any equation whose spatial evolution is independent of time. The theory of finite semigroups has been of particular importance in theoretical computer science since the 1950s because of the natural link between finite semigroups and finite automata. In probability theory, semigroups are associated with Markov processes (Feller 1971).

Definition

A semigroup is a set, S, together with a binary operation "·" that satisfies:

Closure
For all a, b in S, the result of the operation a · b is also in S.
Associativity
For all a, b and c in S, the equation (a · b) · c = a · (b · c) holds.

More compactly, a semigroup is an associative magma.

Examples of semigroups

  • Semigroup with one element: there is essentially just one, the singleton {a} with operation a · a = a.
  • Semigroup with two elements: there are five which are essentially different.
  • The set of positive integers with addition.
  • Square nonnegative matrices with matrix multiplication.
  • Any ideal of a ring with the multiplication of the ring.
  • The set of all finite strings over a fixed alphabet Σ with concatenation of strings as the semigroup operation — the so-called "free semigroup over Σ". With the empty string included, this semigroup becomes the free monoid over Σ.
  • A probability distribution F together with all convolution powers of F, with convolution as operation. This is called a convolution semigroup.
  • A monoid is a semigroup with an identity element.
  • A group is a monoid in which every element has an inverse element.

Basic concepts

Identity and zero

Every semigroup, in fact every magma, has at most one identity element. A semigroup with identity is called a monoid. A semigroup without identity may be embedded into a monoid simply by adjoining an element to and defining for all . The notation S1 denotes a monoid obtained from S by adjoining an identity if necessary (S1 = S for a monoid). Thus, every commutative semigroup can be embedded in a group via the Grothendieck group construction.

Similary, every magma has at most one absorbing element, which in semigroup theory is called a zero. Analogous to the above construction, for every semigroup S, one defines S0, a semigroup with 0 that embeds S.

Subsemigroups and ideals

The semigroup operation induces an operation on the collection of its subsets: given subsets A and B of a semigroup, A*B, written commonly as AB, is the set { ab | a in A and b in B }. In terms of this operations, a subset A is called

  • a subsemigroup if AA is a subset of A,
  • a right ideal if AS is a subset of A, and
  • a left ideal if SA is a subset of A.

If A is both a left ideal and a right ideal then it is called an ideal (or a two-sided ideal).

If S is a semigroup, then the intersection of any collection of subsemigroups of S is also a subsemigroup of S. So the subsemigroups of S form a complete lattice.

An example of semigroup with no minimal ideal is the set of positive integers under addition. The minimal ideal of a commutative semigroup, when it exists, is a group.

Green's relations are important tools for analysing the ideals of a semigroup and related notions of structure.

Homomorphisms and congruences

A semigroup homomorphism is a function that preserves semigroup structure. A function f: ST between two semigroups is a homomorphism if the equation

f(ab) = f(a)f(b).

holds for all elements a, b in S, i.e. the result is the same when performing the semigroup operation after or before applying the map f. A semigroup homomorphism is not necessarily a monoid homomorphism.

Two semigroups S and T are said to be isomorphic if there is a bijection f : ST with the property that, for any elements a, b in S, f(ab) = f(a)f(b). Isomorphic semigroups have the same structure.

A semigroup congruence is an equivalence relation that is compatible with the semigroup operation. That is, a subset that is an equivalence relation and and implies for every in S. Like any equivalence relation, a semigroup congruence induces congruence classes

and the semigroup operation induces a binary operation on the congruence classes:

Because is a congruence, the set of all congruence classes of forms a semigroup with , called the quotient semigroup or factor semigroup, and denoted . The mapping is a semigroup homomorphism, called the quotient map, canonical surjection or projection; if S is a monoid then quotient semigroup is a monoid with identity . Conversely, the kernel of any semigroup homomorphism is a semigroup congruence. These results are nothing more than a particularization of the first isomorphism theorem in universal algebra.

Every ideal I of a semigroup induces a subsemigoroup, the Rees factor semigroup via the congruence x ρ y   ⇔   either x = y or both x and y are in I.

Structure of semigroups

For any subset A of S there is a smallest subsemigroup T of S which contains A, and we say that A generates T. A single element x of S generates the subsemigroup { xn | n is a positive integer }. If this is finite, then x is said to be of finite order, otherwise it is of infinite order. A semigroup is said to be periodic if all of its elements are of finite order. A semigroup generated by a single element is said to be monogenic (or cyclic). If a monogenic semigroup is infinite then it is isomorphic to the semigroup of positive integers with the operation of addition. If it is finite and nonempty, then it must contain at least one idempotent. It follows that every nonempty periodic semigroup has at least one idempotent.

A subsemigroup which is also a group is called a subgroup. There is a close relationship between the subgroups of a semigroup and its idempotents. Each subgroup contains exactly one idempotent, namely the identity element of the subgroup. For each idempotent e of the semigroup there is a unique maximal subgroup containing e. Each maximal subgroup arises in this way, so there is a one-to-one correspondence between idempotents and maximal subgroups. Here the term maximal subgroup differs from its standard use in group theory.

More can often be said when the order is finite. For example, every nonempty finite semigroup is periodic, and has a minimal ideal and at least one idempotent. For more on the structure of finite semigroups, see Krohn-Rhodes theory.

Special classes of semigroups

  • A monoid is a semigroup with identity.
  • A subsemigroup is a subset of a semigroup that is closed under the semigroup operation.
  • A band is a semigroup the operation of which is idempotent.
  • Semilattices: A semigroup whose operation is idempotent and commutative is a semilattice.
  • 0-simple semigroups.
  • Transformation semigroups: any finite semigroup S can be represented by transformations of a (state-) set Q of at most |S|+1 states. Each element x of S then maps Q into itself x: QQ and sequence xy is defined by q(xy) = (qx)y for each q in Q. Sequencing clearly is an associative operation, here equivalent to function composition. This representation is basic for any automaton or finite state machine (FSM).
  • Bicyclic semigroups.
  • C0-semigroups.
  • Regular semigroups. Every element x has at least one inverse y satisfying xyx=x and yxy=x; x and y are sometimes called mutually inverse. A regular semigroup has plenty of idempotens of the form xy where
  • Inverse semigroups are regular semigroups where every element has exactly one inverse. Alternatively, a semigroup is inverse if and only if any two idempotents commute.
  • Affine semigroup: a semigroup that is isomorphic to a finitely-generated subsemigroup of Zd. These semigroups have applications to commutative algebra.

Semigroup methods in partial differential equations

Semigroup theory can be used to study some problems in the field of partial differential equations. Roughly speaking, the semigroup approach is to regard a time-dependent partial differential equation as an ordinary differential equation on a function space. For example, consider the following initial/boundary value problem for the heat equation on the spatial interval (0, 1) ⊂ R and times t ≥ 0:

Let X be the Lp space L2((0, 1); R) and let A be the second-derivative operator with domain

Then the above initial/boundary value problem can be interpreted as an initial value problem for an ordinary differential equation on the space X:

On an heuristic level, the solution to this problem "ought" to be u(t) = exp(tA)u0. However, for a rigorous treatment, a meaning must be given to the exponential of tA. As a function of t, exp(tA) is a semigroup of operators from X to itself, taking the initial state u0 at time t = 0 to the state u(t) = exp(tA)u0 at time t. The operator A is said to be the infinitesimal generator of the semigroup.

History

The study of semigroups trailed behind than that of other algebraic structures with more complex axioms such as groups or rings. A number of sources[1][2] attribute the first use of the term (in French) to J.-A. de Séguier in Élements de la Théorie des Groupes Abstraits (Elements of the Theory of Abstract Groups) in 1904. The term is used in English in 1908 in Harold Hinton's Theory of Groups of Finite Order.

Anton Suschkewitsch obtained the first non-trivial results about semigroups. His 1928 paper Über die endlichen Gruppen ohne das Gesetz der eindeutigen Umkehrbarkeit (On finite groups without the rule of unique invertibility) determined the structure of finite simple semigroups and showed that the minimal ideal (or Green's relations J-class) of a finite semigroup is simple.[2] From that point on, the foundations of semigroup theory were further laid by David Rees, James Alexander Green, Evgenii Sergeevich Lyapin, Alfred H. Clifford and Gordon Preston. The latter two published a two-volume monograph on semigroup theory in 1961 and 1967 respectively. In 1970, a new periodical called Semigroup Forum (currently edited by Springer Verlag) became one of the few mathematical journals devoted entirely to semigroup theory.

In recent years researchers in the field have became more specialized with dedicated monographs appearing on important classes of semigroups, like inverse semigroups, as well as monographs focusing on applications in algebraic automata theory, particularly for finite automata, and also in functional analysis.

Generalizations

If the associativity axiom of a semigroup is dropped, the result is a magma, which is nothing more than a set M equipped with a binary operation M × M → M.

Generalizing in a different direction, an n-ary semigroup (also n-semigroup, polyadic semigroup or multiary semigroup) is a generalization of a semigroup to a set G with a n-ary operation instead of a binary operation.[3] The associative law is generalized as follows: ternary associativity is (abc)de = a(bcd)e = ab(cde), i.e. the string abcde with any three adjacent elements bracketed. N-ary associativity is a string of length n + (n1) with any n adjacent elements bracketed. A 2-ary semigroup is just a semigroup. Further axioms lead to an n-ary group.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Earliest Known Uses of Some of the Words of Mathematics
  2. ^ a b An account of Suschkewitsch's paper by Christopher Hollings
  3. ^ Dudek, W.A. (2001), "On some old problems in n-ary groups", Quasigroups and Related Systems, 8: 15–36.

References

General references
Specific references