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algebra Algebra () is one of the broad areas of mathematics. Roughly speaking, algebra is the study of mathematical symbols and the rules for manipulating these symbols in formulas; it is a unifying thread of almost all of mathematics. Elementary ...
, a presentation of a monoid (or a presentation of a semigroup) is a description of a
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 ...
(or a
semigroup In mathematics, a semigroup is an algebraic structure consisting of a set together with an associative internal binary operation on it. The binary operation of a semigroup is most often denoted multiplicatively: ''x''·''y'', or simply ''xy'', ...
) in terms of a set of generators and a set of relations on the
free monoid In abstract algebra, the free monoid on a set is the monoid whose elements are all the finite sequences (or strings) of zero or more elements from that set, with string concatenation as the monoid operation and with the unique sequence of zero ele ...
(or the free semigroup ) generated by . The monoid is then presented as the
quotient In arithmetic, a quotient (from lat, quotiens 'how many times', pronounced ) is a quantity produced by the division of two numbers. The quotient has widespread use throughout mathematics, and is commonly referred to as the integer part of a ...
of the free monoid (or the free semigroup) by these relations. This is an analogue of a
group presentation In mathematics, a presentation is one method of specifying a group. A presentation of a group ''G'' comprises a set ''S'' of generators—so that every element of the group can be written as a product of powers of some of these generators—and ...
in
group theory In abstract algebra, group theory studies the algebraic structures known as group (mathematics), groups. The concept of a group is central to abstract algebra: other well-known algebraic structures, such as ring (mathematics), rings, field ...
. As a mathematical structure, a monoid presentation is identical to a string rewriting system (also known as a semi-Thue system). Every monoid may be presented by a semi-Thue system (possibly over an infinite alphabet).Book and Otto, Theorem 7.1.7, p. 149 A ''presentation'' should not be confused with a '' representation''.


Construction

The relations are given as a (finite) binary relation on . To form the quotient monoid, these relations are extended to monoid congruences as follows: First, one takes the symmetric closure of . This is then extended to a symmetric relation by defining if and only if = and = for some strings with . Finally, one takes the reflexive and transitive closure of , which then is a monoid congruence. In the typical situation, the relation is simply given as a set of equations, so that R=\. Thus, for example, :\langle p,q\,\vert\; pq=1\rangle is the equational presentation for the bicyclic monoid, and :\langle a,b \,\vert\; aba=baa, bba=bab\rangle is the
plactic monoid In mathematics, the plactic monoid is the monoid of all words in the alphabet of positive integers modulo Knuth equivalence. Its elements can be identified with semistandard Young tableaux. It was discovered by (who called it the tableau algebra ...
of degree 2 (it has infinite order). Elements of this plactic monoid may be written as a^ib^j(ba)^k for integers ''i'', ''j'', ''k'', as the relations show that ''ba'' commutes with both ''a'' and ''b''.


Inverse monoids and semigroups

Presentations of inverse monoids and semigroups can be defined in a similar way using a pair :(X;T) where (X\cup X^)^* is the free monoid with involution on X, and :T\subseteq (X\cup X^)^*\times (X\cup X^)^* is a
binary Binary may refer to: Science and technology Mathematics * Binary number, a representation of numbers using only two digits (0 and 1) * Binary function, a function that takes two arguments * Binary operation, a mathematical operation that ta ...
relation between words. We denote by T^ (respectively T^\mathrm) the equivalence relation (respectively, the congruence) generated by ''T''. We use this pair of objects to define an inverse monoid :\mathrm^1 \langle X , T\rangle. Let \rho_X be the Wagner congruence on X, we define the inverse monoid :\mathrm^1 \langle X , T\rangle ''presented'' by (X;T) as :\mathrm^1 \langle X , T\rangle=(X\cup X^)^*/(T\cup\rho_X)^. In the previous discussion, if we replace everywhere ()^* with ()^+ we obtain a presentation (for an inverse semigroup) (X;T) and an inverse semigroup \mathrm\langle X , T\rangle presented by (X;T). A trivial but important example is the free inverse monoid (or free inverse semigroup) on X, that is usually denoted by \mathrm(X) (respectively \mathrm(X)) and is defined by :\mathrm(X)=\mathrm^1 \langle X , \varnothing\rangle=()^*/\rho_X, or :\mathrm(X)=\mathrm \langle X , \varnothing\rangle=()^+/\rho_X.


Notes


References

* John M. Howie, ''Fundamentals of Semigroup Theory'' (1995), Clarendon Press, Oxford * M. Kilp, U. Knauer, A.V. Mikhalev, ''Monoids, Acts and Categories with Applications to Wreath Products and Graphs'', De Gruyter Expositions in Mathematics vol. 29, Walter de Gruyter, 2000, . * Ronald V. Book and Friedrich Otto, ''String-rewriting Systems'', Springer, 1993, , chapter 7, "Algebraic Properties" {{DEFAULTSORT:Presentation Of A Monoid Semigroup theory