Amalgamation property
Image:Amalgamation property.svg|thumb|200px|alt=Amalgamation Property commutative diagram|A commutative diagram of the amalgamation property.
In the mathematical field of model theory, the amalgamation property is a property of collections of structures that guarantees, under certain conditions, that two structures in the collection can be regarded as substructures of a larger one.
This property plays a crucial role in Fraïssé's theorem, which characterises classes of finite structures that arise as
ages of countable homogeneous structures.
The diagram of the amalgamation property appears in many areas of mathematical logic. Examples include in modal logic as an incestual accessibility relation, and in lambda calculus as a manner of reduction having the Church–Rosser property.
Definition
An amalgam can be formally defined as a 5-tuple such that A,B,C are structures having the same signature, and f: A → B, g: A → C are embeddings. Recall that f: A → B is an embedding if f is an injective morphism which induces an isomorphism from A to the substructure f of B.A class K of structures has the amalgamation property if for every amalgam with A,B,C ∈ K and A ≠ Ø, there exist both a structure D ∈ K and embeddings f': ''B → D, g': C'' → D such that
A first-order theory has the amalgamation property if the class of models of has the amalgamation property. The amalgamation property has certain connections to the quantifier elimination.
In general, the amalgamation property can be considered for a category with a specified choice of the class of morphisms. This notion is related to the categorical notion of a pullback, in particular, in connection with the strong amalgamation property.
Examples
- The class of sets, where the embeddings are injective functions, and if they are assumed to be inclusions then an amalgam is simply the union of the two sets.
- The class of free groups where the embeddings are injective homomorphisms, and an amalgam is the quotient group, where * is the free product.
- The class of finite linear orderings. This is due to the fact that any homogeneous structure from an amalgamation class of finite structure.
Now consider the class of algebraically closed fields. This class has the amalgamation property since any two field extensions of a prime field can be embedded into a common field. However, two arbitrary fields cannot be embedded into a common field when the characteristic of the fields differ.