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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, particularly in
abstract algebra In mathematics, more specifically algebra, abstract algebra or modern algebra is the study of algebraic structures. Algebraic structures include groups, rings, fields, modules, vector spaces, lattices, and algebras over a field. The ter ...
, a semigroup with involution or a *-semigroup is a semigroup equipped with an involutive anti-automorphism, which—roughly speaking—brings it closer to a group because this involution, considered as
unary operator In mathematics, an unary operation is an operation with only one operand, i.e. a single input. This is in contrast to binary operations, which use two operands. An example is any function , where is a set. The function is a unary operation o ...
, exhibits certain fundamental properties of the operation of taking the inverse in a group: uniqueness, double application "cancelling itself out", and the same interaction law with the binary operation as in the case of the group inverse. It is thus not a surprise that any group is a semigroup with involution. However, there are significant natural examples of semigroups with involution that are not groups. An example from
linear algebra Linear algebra is the branch of mathematics concerning linear equations such as: :a_1x_1+\cdots +a_nx_n=b, linear maps such as: :(x_1, \ldots, x_n) \mapsto a_1x_1+\cdots +a_nx_n, and their representations in vector spaces and through matrice ...
is the multiplicative
monoid In abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics, a monoid is a set equipped with an associative binary operation and an identity element. For example, the nonnegative integers with addition form a monoid, the identity element being 0. Monoid ...
of real square matrices of order ''n'' (called the full linear monoid). The map which sends a matrix to its transpose is an involution because the transpose is well defined for any matrix and obeys the law , which has the same form of interaction with multiplication as taking inverses has in the general linear group (which is a subgroup of the full linear monoid). However, for an arbitrary matrix, ''AA''T does not equal the identity element (namely the diagonal matrix). Another example, coming from
formal language In logic, mathematics, computer science, and linguistics, a formal language consists of words whose letters are taken from an alphabet and are well-formed according to a specific set of rules. The alphabet of a formal language consists of sym ...
theory, is the free semigroup generated by a
nonempty set In mathematics, the empty set is the unique set having no elements; its size or cardinality (count of elements in a set) is zero. Some axiomatic set theories ensure that the empty set exists by including an axiom of empty set, while in other ...
(an
alphabet An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent language in this way; in a syllabary, each character represents a syllab ...
), with string
concatenation In formal language theory and computer programming, string concatenation is the operation of joining character strings end-to-end. For example, the concatenation of "snow" and "ball" is "snowball". In certain formalisations of concatenat ...
as the binary operation, and the involution being the map which reverses the linear order of the letters in a string. A third example, from basic
set theory Set theory is the branch of mathematical logic that studies sets, which can be informally described as collections of objects. Although objects of any kind can be collected into a set, set theory, as a branch of mathematics, is mostly concern ...
, is the set of all
binary relation In mathematics, a binary relation associates elements of one set, called the ''domain'', with elements of another set, called the ''codomain''. A binary relation over sets and is a new set of ordered pairs consisting of elements in and in ...
s between a set and itself, with the involution being the converse relation, and the multiplication given by the usual
composition of relations In the mathematics of binary relations, the composition of relations is the forming of a new binary relation from two given binary relations ''R'' and ''S''. In the calculus of relations, the composition of relations is called relative multiplica ...
. Semigroups with involution appeared explicitly named in a 1953 paper of
Viktor Wagner Viktor Vladimirovich Wagner, also Vagner (russian: Виктор Владимирович Вагнер) (4 November 1908 – 15 August 1981) was a Russian mathematician, best known for his work in differential geometry and on semigroups. Wagner w ...
(in Russian) as result of his attempt to bridge the theory of semigroups with that of semiheaps.


Formal definition

Let ''S'' be a semigroup with its binary operation written multiplicatively. An involution in ''S'' is a
unary operation In mathematics, an unary operation is an operation with only one operand, i.e. a single input. This is in contrast to binary operations, which use two operands. An example is any function , where is a set. The function is a unary operation o ...
* on ''S'' (or, a transformation * : ''S'' → ''S'', ''x'' ↦ ''x''*) satisfying the following conditions: # For all ''x'' in ''S'', (''x''*)* = ''x''. # For all ''x'', ''y'' in ''S'' we have (''xy'')* = ''y''*''x''*. The semigroup ''S'' with the involution * is called a semigroup with involution. Semigroups that satisfy only the first of these axioms belong to the larger class of U-semigroups. In some applications, the second of these axioms has been called antidistributive. Regarding the natural philosophy of this axiom, H.S.M. Coxeter remarked that it "becomes clear when we think of and as the operations of putting on our socks and shoes, respectively."


Examples

# If ''S'' is a commutative semigroup then the
identity map Graph of the identity function on the real numbers In mathematics, an identity function, also called an identity relation, identity map or identity transformation, is a function that always returns the value that was used as its argument, unc ...
of S is an involution. # If ''S'' is a group then the inversion map * : ''S'' → ''S'' defined by ''x''* = ''x''−1 is an involution. Furthermore, on an
abelian group In mathematics, an abelian group, also called a commutative group, is a group in which the result of applying the group operation to two group elements does not depend on the order in which they are written. That is, the group operation is comm ...
both this map and the one from the previous example are involutions satisfying the axioms of semigroup with involution. # If ''S'' is an
inverse semigroup In group theory, an inverse semigroup (occasionally called an inversion semigroup) ''S'' is a semigroup in which every element ''x'' in ''S'' has a unique ''inverse'' ''y'' in ''S'' in the sense that ''x = xyx'' and ''y = yxy'', i.e. a regular semig ...
then the inversion map is an involution which leaves the idempotents invariant. As noted in the previous example, the inversion map is not necessarily the only map with this property in an inverse semigroup. There may well be other involutions that leave all idempotents invariant; for example the identity map on a commutative regular, hence inverse, semigroup, in particular, an abelian group. A regular semigroup is an
inverse semigroup In group theory, an inverse semigroup (occasionally called an inversion semigroup) ''S'' is a semigroup in which every element ''x'' in ''S'' has a unique ''inverse'' ''y'' in ''S'' in the sense that ''x = xyx'' and ''y = yxy'', i.e. a regular semig ...
if and only if it admits an involution under which each idempotent is an invariant. # Underlying every C*-algebra is a *-semigroup. An important instance is the algebra ''M''''n''(C) of ''n''-by-''n'' matrices over C, with the conjugate transpose as involution. # If ''X'' is a set, the set of all
binary relation In mathematics, a binary relation associates elements of one set, called the ''domain'', with elements of another set, called the ''codomain''. A binary relation over sets and is a new set of ordered pairs consisting of elements in and in ...
s on ''X'' is a *-semigroup with the * given by the converse relation, and the multiplication given by the usual
composition of relations In the mathematics of binary relations, the composition of relations is the forming of a new binary relation from two given binary relations ''R'' and ''S''. In the calculus of relations, the composition of relations is called relative multiplica ...
. This is an example of a *-semigroup which is not a regular semigroup. # If X is a set, then the set of all finite sequences (or strings) of members of X forms a free monoid under the operation of concatenation of sequences, with sequence reversal as an involution. # A
rectangular band In mathematics, a band (also called idempotent semigroup) is a semigroup in which every element is idempotent (in other words equal to its own square). Bands were first studied and named by ; the lattice of varieties of bands was described ind ...
on a Cartesian product of a set ''A'' with itself, i.e. with elements from ''A'' × ''A'', with the semigroup product defined as (''a'', ''b'')(''c'', ''d'') = (''a'', ''d''), with the involution being the order reversal of the elements of a pair (''a'', ''b'')* = (''b'', ''a''). This semigroup is also a regular semigroup, as all bands are.Nordahl and Scheiblich


Basic concepts and properties

An element ''x'' of a semigroup with involution is sometimes called ''hermitian'' (by analogy with a Hermitian matrix) when it is left invariant by the involution, meaning ''x''* = ''x''. Elements of the form ''xx''* or ''x''*''x'' are always hermitian, and so are all powers of a hermitian element. As noted in the examples section, a semigroup ''S'' is an
inverse semigroup In group theory, an inverse semigroup (occasionally called an inversion semigroup) ''S'' is a semigroup in which every element ''x'' in ''S'' has a unique ''inverse'' ''y'' in ''S'' in the sense that ''x = xyx'' and ''y = yxy'', i.e. a regular semig ...
if and only if ''S'' is a regular semigroup and admits an involution such that every idempotent is hermitian. Certain basic concepts may be defined on *-semigroups in a way that parallels the notions stemming from a regular element in a semigroup. A ''partial isometry'' is an element ''s'' such that ''ss''*''s'' = ''s''; the set of partial isometries of a semigroup ''S'' is usually abbreviated PI(''S''). A ''projection'' is an idempotent element ''e'' that is also hermitian, meaning that ''ee'' = ''e'' and ''e''* = ''e''. Every projection is a partial isometry, and for every partial isometry ''s'', ''s''*''s'' and ''ss''* are projections. If ''e'' and ''f'' are projections, then ''e'' = ''ef'' if and only if ''e'' = ''fe''.Lawson, p. 117 Partial isometries can be partially ordered by ''s'' ≤ ''t'' defined as holding whenever ''s'' = ''ss''*''t'' and ''ss''* = ''ss''*''tt''*. Equivalently, ''s'' ≤ ''t'' if and only if ''s'' = ''et'' and ''e'' = ''ett''* for some projection ''e''. In a *-semigroup, PI(''S'') is an ordered groupoid with the partial product given by ''s''⋅''t'' = ''st'' if ''s''*''s'' = ''tt''*.


Examples

In terms of examples for these notions, in the *-semigroup of binary relations on a set, the partial isometries are the relations that are
difunctional In mathematics, a binary relation associates elements of one set, called the ''domain'', with elements of another set, called the ''codomain''. A binary relation over sets and is a new set of ordered pairs consisting of elements in and i ...
. The projections in this *-semigroup are the
partial equivalence relation In mathematics, a partial equivalence relation (often abbreviated as PER, in older literature also called restricted equivalence relation) is a homogeneous binary relation that is symmetric and transitive. If the relation is also reflexive, the ...
s. The partial isometries in a C*-algebra are exactly those defined in this section. In the case of ''M''''n''(C) more can be said. If ''E'' and ''F'' are projections, then ''E'' ≤ ''F'' if and only if im''E'' ⊆ im''F''. For any two projection, if ''E'' ∩ ''F'' = ''V'', then the unique projection ''J'' with image ''V'' and kernel the orthogonal complement of ''V'' is the meet of ''E'' and ''F''. Since projections form a meet- semilattice, the partial isometries on ''M''''n''(C) form an inverse semigroup with the product A(A^*A\wedge BB^*)B. Another simple example of these notions appears in the next section.


Notions of regularity

There are two related, but not identical notions of regularity in *-semigroups. They were introduced nearly simultaneously by Nordahl & Scheiblich (1978) and respectively Drazin (1979).


Regular *-semigroups (Nordahl & Scheiblich)

As mentioned in the previous examples,
inverse semigroup In group theory, an inverse semigroup (occasionally called an inversion semigroup) ''S'' is a semigroup in which every element ''x'' in ''S'' has a unique ''inverse'' ''y'' in ''S'' in the sense that ''x = xyx'' and ''y = yxy'', i.e. a regular semig ...
s are a subclass of *-semigroups. It is also textbook knowledge that an inverse semigroup can be characterized as a regular semigroup in which any two idempotents commute. In 1963, Boris M. Schein showed that the following two axioms provide an analogous characterization of inverse semigroups as a
subvariety A subvariety (Latin: ''subvarietas'') in botanical nomenclature is a taxonomic rank. They are rarely used to classify organisms. Plant taxonomy Subvariety is ranked: *below that of variety (''varietas'') *above that of form (''forma''). Subva ...
of *-semigroups: * ''x'' = ''xx''*''x'' * (''xx''*)(''x''*''x'') = (''x''*''x'')(''xx''*) The first of these looks like the definition of a regular element, but is actually in terms of the involution. Likewise, the second axiom appears to be describing the commutation of two idempotents. It is known however that regular semigroups do not form a variety because their class does not contain free objects (a result established by D. B. McAlister in 1968). This line of reasoning motivated Nordahl and Scheiblich to begin in 1977 the study of the (variety of) *-semigroups that satisfy only the first these two axioms; because of the similarity in form with the property defining regular semigroups, they named this variety regular *-semigroups. It is a simple calculation to establish that a regular *-semigroup is also a regular semigroup because ''x''* turns out to be an inverse of ''x''. The rectangular band from Example 7 is a regular *-semigroup that is not an inverse semigroup. It is also easy to verify that in a regular *-semigroup the product of any two projections is an idempotent. In the aforementioned rectangular band example, the projections are elements of the form (''x'', ''x'') and ike all elements of a bandare idempotent. However, two different projections in this band need not commute, nor is their product necessarily a projection since (''a'', ''a'')(''b'', ''b'') = (''a'', ''b''). Semigroups that satisfy only ''x''** = ''x'' = ''xx''*''x'' (but not necessarily the antidistributivity of * over multiplication) have also been studied under the name of I-semigroups.


P-systems

The problem of characterizing when a regular semigroup is a regular *-semigroup (in the sense of Nordahl & Scheiblich) was addressed by M. Yamada (1982). He defined a P-system F(S) as subset of the idempotents of S, denoted as usual by E(S). Using the usual notation V(''a'') for the inverses of ''a'', F(S) needs to satisfy the following axioms: # For any ''a'' in S, there exists a unique a° in V(''a'') such that ''aa''° and ''a''°''a'' are in F(S) # For any ''a'' in S, and b in F(S), ''a°ba'' is in F(S), where ° is the well-defined operation from the previous axiom # For any ''a'', ''b'' in F(S), ''ab'' is in E(S); note: not necessarily in F(S) A regular semigroup S is a *-regular semigroup, as defined by Nordahl & Scheiblich, if and only if it has a p-system F(S). In this case F(S) is the set of projections of S with respect to the operation ° defined by F(S). In an
inverse semigroup In group theory, an inverse semigroup (occasionally called an inversion semigroup) ''S'' is a semigroup in which every element ''x'' in ''S'' has a unique ''inverse'' ''y'' in ''S'' in the sense that ''x = xyx'' and ''y = yxy'', i.e. a regular semig ...
the entire semilattice of idempotents is a p-system. Also, if a regular semigroup S has a p-system that is multiplicatively closed (i.e. subsemigroup), then S is an inverse semigroup. Thus, a p-system may be regarded as a generalization of the semilattice of idempotents of an inverse semigroup.


*-regular semigroups (Drazin)

A semigroup ''S'' with an involution * is called a *-regular semigroup (in the sense of Drazin) if for every ''x'' in ''S'', ''x''* is ''H''-equivalent to some inverse of ''x'', where ''H'' is the Green's relation ''H''. This defining property can be formulated in several equivalent ways. Another is to say that every ''L''-class contains a projection. An axiomatic definition is the condition that for every ''x'' in ''S'' there exists an element ''x''′ such that , , , . Michael P. Drazin first proved that given ''x'', the element ''x''′ satisfying these axioms is unique. It is called the Moore–Penrose inverse of ''x''. This agrees with the classical definition of the
Moore–Penrose inverse In mathematics, and in particular linear algebra, the Moore–Penrose inverse of a matrix is the most widely known generalization of the inverse matrix. It was independently described by E. H. Moore in 1920, Arne Bjerhammar in 1951, and Ro ...
of a square matrix. One motivation for studying these semigroups is that they allow generalizing the Moore–Penrose inverse's properties from and to more general sets. In the multiplicative semigroup ''M''''n''(''C'') of square matrices of order ''n'', the map which assigns a matrix ''A'' to its Hermitian conjugate ''A''* is an involution. The semigroup ''M''''n''(''C'') is a *-regular semigroup with this involution. The Moore–Penrose inverse of A in this *-regular semigroup is the classical Moore–Penrose inverse of ''A''.


Free semigroup with involution

As with all varieties, the category of semigroups with involution admits free objects. The construction of a free semigroup (or monoid) with involution is based on that of a free semigroup (and respectively that of a free monoid). Moreover, the construction of a free group can easily be derived by refining the construction of a free monoid with involution.Lawson p. 51 The generators of a free semigroup with involution are the elements of the union of two ( equinumerous) disjoint sets in bijective correspondence: Y=X\sqcup X^\dagger. (Here the notation \sqcup\, emphasized that the union is actually a disjoint union.) In the case were the two sets are finite, their union ''Y'' is sometimes called an ''
alphabet An alphabet is a standardized set of basic written graphemes (called letters) that represent the phonemes of certain spoken languages. Not all writing systems represent language in this way; in a syllabary, each character represents a syllab ...
with involution'' or a ''symmetric alphabet''. Let \theta:X\rightarrow X^\dagger be a bijection; \theta is naturally
extended Extension, extend or extended may refer to: Mathematics Logic or set theory * Axiom of extensionality * Extensible cardinal * Extension (model theory) * Extension (predicate logic), the set of tuples of values that satisfy the predicate * Ext ...
to a bijection \dagger: Y \to Y essentially by taking the disjoint union of \theta (as a set) with its
inverse Inverse or invert may refer to: Science and mathematics * Inverse (logic), a type of conditional sentence which is an immediate inference made from another conditional sentence * Additive inverse (negation), the inverse of a number that, when a ...
, or in
piecewise In mathematics, a piecewise-defined function (also called a piecewise function, a hybrid function, or definition by cases) is a function defined by multiple sub-functions, where each sub-function applies to a different interval in the domain. P ...
notation: : y^\dagger = \begin \theta(y) & \text y \in X \\ \theta^(y) & \text y \in X^\dagger \end Now construct Y^+\, as the free semigroup on Y\, in the usual way with the binary (semigroup) operation on Y^+\, being
concatenation In formal language theory and computer programming, string concatenation is the operation of joining character strings end-to-end. For example, the concatenation of "snow" and "ball" is "snowball". In certain formalisations of concatenat ...
: : w = w_1w_2 \cdots w_k \in Y^+ for some letters w_i\in Y. The bijection \dagger on Y is then extended as a bijection ^\dagger:Y^+\rightarrow Y^+ defined as the string reversal of the elements of Y^+\, that consist of more than one letter: : w^\dagger=w_k^\dagger w_^\dagger \cdots w_^\dagger w_^\dagger. This map is an involution on the semigroup Y^+\,. Thus, the semigroup (X\sqcup X^\dagger)^+ with the map ^\dagger\, is a semigroup with involution, called a free semigroup with involution on ''X''.Lawson p. 172 (The irrelevance of the concrete identity of X^\dagger and of the bijection \theta in this choice of terminology is explained below in terms of the universal property of the construction.) Note that unlike in Example 6, the involution ''of every letter'' is a distinct element in an alphabet with involution, and consequently the same observation extends to a free semigroup with involution. If in the above construction instead of Y^+\, we use the free monoid Y^*=Y^+\cup\, which is just the free semigroup extended with the empty word \varepsilon\, (which is the identity element of the
monoid In abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics, a monoid is a set equipped with an associative binary operation and an identity element. For example, the nonnegative integers with addition form a monoid, the identity element being 0. Monoid ...
Y^*\,), and suitably extend the involution with \varepsilon^\dagger = \varepsilon, we obtain a free monoid with involution. The construction above is actually the only way to extend a given map \theta\, from X\, to X^\dagger\,, to an involution on Y^+\, (and likewise on Y^*\,). The qualifier "free" for these constructions is justified in the usual sense that they are universal constructions. In the case of the free semigroup with involution, given an arbitrary semigroup with involution S\, and a map \Phi:X\rightarrow S, then a semigroup homomorphism \overline\Phi:(X\sqcup X^\dagger)^+\rightarrow S exists such that \Phi = \iota \circ \overline\Phi, where \iota : X \rightarrow (X\sqcup X^\dagger)^+ is the inclusion map and composition of functions is taken in diagram order. The construction of (X\sqcup X^\dagger)^+ as a semigroup with involution is unique up to
isomorphism In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between them. The word i ...
. An analogous argument holds for the free monoid with involution in terms of monoid homomorphisms and the uniqueness up to isomorphism of the construction of (X\sqcup X^\dagger)^* as a monoid with involution. The construction of a free group is not very far off from that of a free monoid with involution. The additional ingredient needed is to define a notion of reduced word and a rewriting rule for producing such words simply by deleting any adjacent pairs of letter of the form xx^\dagger or x^\dagger x. It can be shown than the order of rewriting (deleting) such pairs does not matter, i.e. any order of deletions produces the same result. (Otherwise put, these rules define a confluent rewriting system.) Equivalently, a free group is constructed from a free monoid with involution by taking the quotient of the latter by the congruence \, which is sometimes called the Dyck congruence—in a certain sense it generalizes
Dyck language In the theory of formal languages of computer science, mathematics, and linguistics, a Dyck word is a balanced string of square brackets and The set of Dyck words forms the Dyck language. Dyck words and language are named after the mathemat ...
to multiple kinds of "parentheses" However simplification in the Dyck congruence takes place regardless of order. For example, if ")" is the inverse of "(", then ()=)(=\varepsilon; the one-sided congruence that appears in the Dyck language proper \, which instantiates only to ()=\varepsilon is (perhaps confusingly) called the Shamir congruence. The quotient of a free monoid with involution by the Shamir congruence is not a group, but a monoid ; nevertheless it has been called the free half group by its first discoverer— Eli Shamir—although more recently it has been called the involutive monoid generated by ''X''. (This latter choice of terminology conflicts however with the use of "involutive" to denote any semigroup with involution—a practice also encountered in the literature.)


Baer *-semigroups

A Baer *-semigroup is a *-semigroup with (two-sided) zero in which the right annihilator of every element coincides with the right ideal of some projection; this property is expressed formally as: for all ''x'' ∈ ''S'' there exists a projection ''e'' such that : = ''eS''. The projection ''e'' is in fact uniquely determined by ''x''. More recently, Baer *-semigroups have been also called Foulis semigroups, after David James Foulis who studied them in depth.Harding, John. "Daggers, Kernels, Baer *-Semigroups, and Orthomodularity". ''Journal of Philosophical Logic''. 6 April 2013.


Examples and applications

The set of all binary relations on a set (from
example 5 Example may refer to: * '' exempli gratia'' (e.g.), usually read out in English as "for example" * .example, reserved as a domain name that may not be installed as a top-level domain of the Internet ** example.com, example.net, example.org, e ...
) is a Baer *-semigroup.Foulis, D. J. Relative inverses in Baer *-semigroups. Michigan Math. J. 10 (1963), no. 1, 65–84. . Baer *-semigroups are also encountered in
quantum mechanics Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, ...
, in particular as the multiplicative semigroups of Baer *-rings. If ''H'' is a
Hilbert space In mathematics, Hilbert spaces (named after David Hilbert) allow generalizing the methods of linear algebra and calculus from (finite-dimensional) Euclidean vector spaces to spaces that may be infinite-dimensional. Hilbert spaces arise natural ...
, then the multiplicative semigroup of all bounded operators on ''H'' is a Baer *-semigroup. The involution in this case maps an operator to its adjoint. Baer *-semigroup allow the coordinatization of
orthomodular lattice In the mathematical discipline of order theory, a complemented lattice is a bounded lattice (with least element 0 and greatest element 1), in which every element ''a'' has a complement, i.e. an element ''b'' satisfying ''a'' ∨ ''b''&nb ...
s.


See also

*
Dagger category In category theory, a branch of mathematics, a dagger category (also called involutive category or category with involution) is a category equipped with a certain structure called ''dagger'' or ''involution''. The name dagger category was coined ...
(aka category with involution) — generalizes the notion * *-algebra *
Special classes of semigroups In mathematics, a semigroup is a nonempty set together with an associative binary operation. A special class of semigroups is a class of semigroups satisfying additional properties or conditions. Thus the class of commutative semigroups consists ...


Notes


References

* Mark V. Lawson (1998). "Inverse semigroups: the theory of partial symmetries".
World Scientific World Scientific Publishing is an academic publisher of scientific, technical, and medical books and journals headquartered in Singapore. The company was founded in 1981. It publishes about 600 books annually, along with 135 journals in various ...
* D J Foulis (1958). ''Involution Semigroups'', PhD Thesis, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
Publications of D.J. Foulis
(Accessed on 5 May 2009) * W.D. Munn, ''Special Involutions'', in A.H. Clifford, K.H. Hofmann, M.W. Mislove, ''Semigroup theory and its applications: proceedings of the 1994 conference commemorating the work of Alfred H. Clifford'', Cambridge University Press, 1996, . This is a recent survey article on semigroup with (special) involution * Drazin, M.P., ''Regular semigroups with involution'', Proc. Symp. on Regular Semigroups (DeKalb, 1979), 29–46 * Nordahl, T.E., and H.E. Scheiblich, Regular * Semigroups,
Semigroup Forum Semigroup Forum (print , electronic ) is a mathematics research journal published by Springer. The journal serves as a platform for the speedy and efficient transmission of information on current research in semigroup theory. Coverage in the jou ...
, 16(1978), 369–377. * Miyuki Yamada, ''P-systems in regular semigroups'',
Semigroup Forum Semigroup Forum (print , electronic ) is a mathematics research journal published by Springer. The journal serves as a platform for the speedy and efficient transmission of information on current research in semigroup theory. Coverage in the jou ...
, 24(1), December 1982, pp. 173–187 * S. Crvenkovic and Igor Dolinka,
Varieties of involution semigroups and involution semirings: a survey
, Bulletin of the Society of Mathematicians of Banja Luka Vol. 9 (2002), 7–47. * {{DEFAULTSORT:Semigroup With Involution Algebraic structures Semigroup theory