Nowhere commutative semigroup
In mathematics, a nowhere commutative semigroup is a semigroup S such that, for all a and b in S, if ab = ba then a = b. A semigroup S is nowhere commutative if and only if any two elements of S are inverses of each other.
Characterization of nowhere commutative semigroups
Nowhere commutative semigroups can be characterized in several different ways. If S is a semigroup then the following statements are equivalent:- S is nowhere commutative.
- S is a rectangular band.
- For all a and b in S, aba = a.
- For all a, b and c in S, a2 = a and abc = ac.
To see that a nowhere commutative semigroup is a rectangular band, let S be a nowhere commutative semigroup. Using the defining properties of a nowhere commutative semigroup, one can see that for every a in S the intersection of the Green classes Ra and La contains the unique element a. Let S/''L be the family of L''-classes in S and S/''R be the family of R''-classes in S. The mapping
defined by
is a bijection. If the Cartesian product × is made into a semigroup by furnishing it with the rectangular band multiplication, the map ψ becomes an isomorphism. So S is isomorphic to a rectangular band.
Other claims of equivalences follow directly from the relevant definitions.