A biordered set (otherwise known as boset) is a
mathematical object that occurs in the description of the
structure
A structure is an arrangement and organization of interrelated elements in a material object or system, or the object or system so organized. Material structures include man-made objects such as buildings and machines and natural objects such as ...
of the set of
idempotents in a
semigroup.
The set of idempotents in a semigroup is a biordered set and every biordered set is the set of idempotents of some semigroup.
A regular biordered set is a biordered set with an additional property. The set of idempotents in a
regular semigroup is a regular biordered set, and every regular biordered set is the set of idempotents of some regular semigroup.
History
The concept and the terminology were developed by
K S S Nambooripad
K. S. S. Nambooripad (6 April 1935 – 4 January 2020) was an Indian mathematician who has made fundamental contributions to the structure theory of regular semigroups. Nambooripad was also instrumental in popularising the TeX software in India ...
in the early 1970s.
In 2002, Patrick Jordan introduced the term boset as an abbreviation of biordered set. The defining properties of a biordered set are expressed in terms of two
quasiorders defined on the set and hence the name biordered set.
According to Mohan S. Putcha, "The axioms defining a biordered set are quite complicated. However, considering the general nature of semigroups, it is rather surprising that such a finite axiomatization is even possible."
Since the publication of the original definition of the biordered set by Nambooripad, several variations in the definition have been proposed. David Easdown simplified the definition and formulated the axioms in a special arrow notation invented by him.
Definition
Preliminaries
If ''X'' and ''Y'' are
sets and ρ ⊆ ''X'' × ''Y'', let ρ ( ''y'' ) = .
Let ''E'' be a
set in which a
partial binary operation
In mathematics, a binary operation or dyadic operation is a rule for combining two elements (called operands) to produce another element. More formally, a binary operation is an operation of arity two.
More specifically, an internal binary op ...
, indicated by juxtaposition, is defined. If ''D''
''E'' is the
domain of the partial binary operation on ''E'' then ''D''
''E'' is a
relation on ''E'' and (''e'',''f'') is in ''D''
''E'' if and only if the product ''ef'' exists in ''E''. The following relations can be defined in ''E'':
:
:
:
:
:
If ''T'' is any
statement about ''E'' involving the partial binary operation and the above relations in ''E'', one can define the left-right
dual
Dual or Duals may refer to:
Paired/two things
* Dual (mathematics), a notion of paired concepts that mirror one another
** Dual (category theory), a formalization of mathematical duality
*** see more cases in :Duality theories
* Dual (grammatical ...
of ''T'' denoted by ''T''*. If ''D''
''E'' is
symmetric then ''T''* is meaningful whenever ''T'' is.
Formal definition
The set ''E'' is called a biordered set if the following
axiom
An axiom, postulate, or assumption is a statement that is taken to be true, to serve as a premise or starting point for further reasoning and arguments. The word comes from the Ancient Greek word (), meaning 'that which is thought worthy or f ...
s and their duals hold for arbitrary elements ''e'', ''f'', ''g'', etc. in ''E''.
:(B1) ω
''r'' and ω
''l'' are
reflexive and
transitive relations on ''E'' and ''D''
''E'' = ( ω
''r'' ∪ ω
''l'' ) ∪ ( ω
''r '' ∪ ω
''l'' )
−1.
:(B21) If ''f'' is in ω
''r''( ''e'' ) then ''f R fe '' ω ''e''.
:(B22) If ''g'' ω
''l'' ''f'' and if ''f'' and ''g'' are in ω
''r'' ( ''e'' ) then ''ge'' ω
''l'' ''fe''.
:(B31) If ''g'' ω
''r'' ''f'' and ''f'' ω
''r'' ''e'' then ''gf'' = ( ''ge'' )''f''.
:(B32) If ''g'' ω
''l'' ''f'' and if ''f'' and ''g'' are in ω
''r'' ( ''e'' ) then ( ''fg'' )''e'' = ( ''fe'' )( ''ge'' ).
In ''M'' ( ''e'', ''f'' ) = ω
''l'' ( ''e'' ) ∩ ω
''r'' ( ''f'' ) (the ''M''-set of ''e'' and ''f'' in that order), define a relation
by
:
.
Then the set
:
is called the sandwich set of ''e'' and ''f'' in that order.
:(B4) If ''f'' and ''g'' are in ω
''r'' ( ''e'' ) then ''S''( ''f'', ''g'' )''e'' = ''S'' ( ''fe'', ''ge'' ).
''M''-biordered sets and regular biordered sets
We say that a biordered set ''E'' is an ''M''-biordered set if ''M'' ( ''e'', ''f'' ) ≠ ∅ for all ''e'' and ''f'' in ''E''.
Also, ''E'' is called a regular biordered set if ''S'' ( ''e'', ''f'' ) ≠ ∅ for all ''e'' and ''f'' in ''E''.
In 2012 Roman S. Gigoń gave a simple proof that ''M''-biordered sets arise from
''E''-inversive semigroups.
[Gigoń, Roman (2012). "Some results on ''E''-inversive semigroups". Quasigroups and Related Systems 20: 53-60.]
Subobjects and morphisms
Biordered subsets
A subset ''F'' of a biordered set ''E'' is a biordered subset (subboset) of ''E'' if ''F'' is a biordered set under the partial binary operation inherited from ''E''.
For any ''e'' in ''E'' the sets ω
''r'' ( ''e'' ), ω
''l'' ( ''e'' ) and ω ( ''e'' ) are biordered subsets of ''E''.
Bimorphisms
A mapping φ : ''E'' → ''F'' between two biordered sets ''E'' and ''F'' is a biordered set homomorphism (also called a bimorphism) if for all ( ''e'', ''f'' ) in ''D''
''E'' we have ( ''e''φ ) ( ''f''φ ) = ( ''ef'' )φ.
Illustrative examples
Vector space example
Let ''V'' be a
vector space and
:''E'' =
where ''V'' = ''A'' ⊕ ''B'' means that ''A'' and ''B'' are
subspaces of ''V'' and ''V'' is the
internal direct sum of ''A'' and ''B''.
The partial binary operation ⋆ on E defined by
:( ''A'', ''B'' ) ⋆ ( ''C'', ''D'' ) = ( ''A'' + ( ''B'' ∩ ''C'' ), ( ''B'' + ''C'' ) ∩ ''D '')
makes ''E'' a biordered set. The quasiorders in ''E'' are characterised as follows:
:( ''A'', ''B'' ) ω
''r'' ( ''C'', ''D'' ) ⇔ ''A'' ⊇ ''C''
:( ''A'', ''B'' ) ω
''l'' ( ''C'', ''D'' ) ⇔ ''B'' ⊆ ''D''
Biordered set of a semigroup
The set ''E'' of idempotents in a semigroup ''S'' becomes a biordered set if a partial binary operation is defined in ''E'' as follows: ''ef'' is defined in ''E'' if and only if ''ef'' = ''e'' or ''ef''= ''f'' or ''fe'' = ''e'' or ''fe'' = ''f'' holds in ''S''. If ''S'' is a regular semigroup then ''E'' is a regular biordered set.
As a concrete example, let ''S'' be the semigroup of all mappings of ''X'' = into itself. Let the symbol (''abc'') denote the map for which 1 → ''a'', 2 → ''b'', and 3 → ''c''. The set ''E'' of idempotents in ''S'' contains the following elements:
:(111), (222), (333) (constant maps)
:(122), (133), (121), (323), (113), (223)
:(123) (identity map)
The following table (taking composition of mappings in the diagram order) describes the partial binary operation in ''E''. An X in a cell indicates that the corresponding multiplication is not defined.
References
{{reflist
Semigroup theory
Algebraic structures
Mathematical structures