48
1 AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010 Janusz Czelakowski Institute of Mathematics and Informatics Opole University, Poland e-mail: [email protected] RELATIVELY CONGRUENCE MODULAR QUASIVARIETIES AND THEIR RELATIVELY CONGRUENCE- DISTRIBUTIVE SUBQUASIVARIETIES 1

AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

  • Upload
    elvin

  • View
    48

  • Download
    4

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010 Janusz Czelakowski Ins t itute of Mathematics and Informatics Opole University, Poland e-mail: [email protected] R ELATIVELY CONGRUENCE MODULAR QUASIVARIETIES AND THEIR RELATIVELY CONGRUENCE- DISTRIBUTIVE SUBQUASIVARIETIES. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

1

AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLANDJune 2-6, 2010

Janusz Czelakowski Institute of Mathematics and Informatics

Opole University, Poland e-mail: [email protected]

RELATIVELY CONGRUENCE MODULAR

QUASIVARIETIES AND THEIR RELATIVELY CONGRUENCE- DISTRIBUTIVE SUBQUASIVARIETIES

1

Page 2: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

2

EQUATIONAL LOGICS

K - class of algebras.

Keq – the consequence operation on the set of equations Eq() determined by the class K: Keq ({ i i : i I}) if and only if

(A K)(h Hom(Te, A)) (h( i ) = h( i) for all i I

implies h( ) = h( ) ).

2

Page 3: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

3

Keq - the equational logic associated with the class K.

Keq is finitary if K finite set of finite algebras.

Th (Keq ) – the lattice of (closed) theories X of Keq

Page 4: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

4

QUASIVARIETIES – classes Q closed under S, P, and Pu.

S, P, and Pu - operations of forming isomorphic copies of

subalgebras, direct products, and ultraproducts, respectively.

Qv(K) - the smallest quasivariety containing K;

K generates the quasivariety Qv(K).

(Mal’cev). Qv(K) = SPPu(K) for any class K.

4

Page 5: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

5

Q is finitely generated if Q = Qv(K) for a finite set K of finite algebras

(i.e., Q = SP(K) for K as above).

Then Keq = Qeq.

5

Page 6: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

6

Q quasivariety, A algebra, and a congruence of A.

is a Q-congruence of A if A/ Q.

ConQ(A) := { Con(A) : A/ Q}.

6

Page 7: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

7

2. THE FINITE BASIS PROBLEM FOR QUASIVARIETIES

Many positive results for varieties: Lyndon [1951, [1954], Baker [1974], [1977], Jónsson [1978],McKenzie [1987],….

Problem: K finite set of finite algebras.Find plausible conditions implying that the quasivariety SP(K) is characterized by a finite set of quasi- identities.

7

Page 8: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

8

General answer:

The complement of SP(K) closed under the formation of ultraproducts.

(Not a manageable condition)

 

8

Page 9: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

9

CONVENTION: The letter Q ranges over quasivarieties.

Q is relatively congruence-distributive (RCD) if the lattice of Q-congruences on each A Q is distributive

9

Page 10: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

10

Main result:

Theorem 2.1 (Pigozzi [1988]). finite signature. Every finitely generated RCD quasivariety Q is finitely based.

Improvement by Czelakowski and Dziobiak [1992]:

Q has a base consisting of a finite set of equations and at most a single quasi-equation.

Page 11: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

11

AAA80, Będlewo, June 2-6, 2010

Generalizations of Theorem 2.1:

R. Villard [2000],M. Maróti and McKenzie[2004], A. Nurakunov [2001]W. Dziobiak, M. Maróti, R. McKenzie, A. Nurakunov [2009], …….

11

Page 12: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

12

Q is relatively congruence-modular (RCM) if the latticeof Q-congruences on each A Q is modular.

The crucial unsolved problem: Let be a finite algebraicsignature. Is every finitely generated RCM quasivariety (in the signature ) finitely based?

Conviction that the right track to a solution of the problemgoes through commutator theory.

12

Page 13: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

13

Commutator theory – well developed for varieties (J.D.P. Smith, J. Hagemann, C. Herrmann, H.P. Gumm, W. Taylor, R. Freese, R. McKenzie, K. Kearnes, Á. Szendrei ….).

Commutator for quasivarieties – pioneering work of Kearnes and McKenzie [1992].

13

Page 14: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

14

J.C. [2006] – new definition of the commutator within the framework of AAL (fits for an arbitrary deductive system in any dimension).

Below – how it works for quasivarieties and how it isrelated to the commutator in the sense adopted in universalalgebra.

Page 15: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

15

3. THE EQUATIONAL COMMUTATOR

Given : Q, two positive integers m and n, two m-tuples and two n-tuples of pairwise distinct

individual variables

x = x1,..., xm, y = y1,..., ym

and z = z1,..., zn, w = w1,…, wn,

respectively.

15

Page 16: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

16

(x, y, z, w, u) (x, y, z, w, u)

is called a commutator equation of Q in the variables x, y andz, w if

(x, x, z, w, u) (x, x, z, w, u)

and (x, y, z, z, u) (x, y, z, z, u)

are valid in Q.

16

Page 17: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

17

In particular, if m = n = 1, then

(x, y, z, w, u) (x, y, z, w, u)

is called a quaternary commutator equation of Q (in thevariables x, y and z, w) if

(x, x, z, w, u) (x, x, z, w, u)

and (x, y, z, z, u) (x, y, z, z, u)

are valid in Q.

Qeq (x y) Qeq (z w)

is the set of quaternary commutator equations of Q (in x, y and z, w).

17

Page 18: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

18

If is a congruence of A and

a = a1,..., am , b = b1,..., bm Am,

we write a b ()

to indicate ai bi () for i = 1,..., m.

18

Page 19: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

19

Definition 3.1. (J.C. [2006]) Q quasivariety, A Q, and are Q-congruences on A.

The equational commutator of and on A relative to Q,

[, ]A,

is the least Q-congruence on A that includes the pairs:

{ (a, b, c, d, e), (a, b, c, d, e) : (x, y, z, w, u) (x, y, z, w, u)

is a commutator equation for Q, a b (), c d (), and e A }.

19

Page 20: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

20

AAA 80

NOTE. The definition of the commutator also makes sense for theories of Qeq. (Relevant in various syntactic investigations.)

Page 21: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

21

Theorem 3.2. Q quasivariety, A Q, and , ConQ (A). Then:

(i) [, ]A is a Q-congruence on A;

(ii) [, ]A ;

(ii) [, ]A = [, ]A;

(iv) The equational commutator is monotone in both

arguments, i.e., if 1, 2 and are Q-congruences on A, then 1 2 implies [1, ]A [2, ]A .

21

Page 22: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

22

Two questions:

(1) Does the equational commutator coincideswith the “standard”commutator for RCM quasivarieties, definedby Kearnes and McKenzie [1992]? (2) What new facts can be proved by means of theequational commutator?

22

Page 23: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

23

Definition 3.3. Q quasivariety, A Q. The equationalcommutator is additive on A if

(C1) [supQ {i : i I }, ] A = supQ{ [i, ] A : i I}

in the lattice ConQ (A).

The equational commutator is additive on Q iff it is additiveon all A Q.

Page 24: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

24

We need one more property of the commutator:

(C2) If h : A B is a surjective homomorphism between Q-algebras and , ConQ (A), then

ker(h) +Q [, ] A = h 1 ( [BQ (h), B

Q (h)] B ).

Theorem 3.4. For any quasivariety Q, if the equational

commutator for Q satisfies (C1), then it satisfies (C2).

Page 25: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

25

Theorem 3.5. The following are equivalent for any Q:(1) The equational commutator is additive on Q;(2) There exists a set (x, y, z, w, u) of quaternary commutator

equations for Q (possibly with parameters u = u1, …, u k,

k ) such that for every algebra A Q and for every pair of sets X, Y A2,

[Q (X), Q (Y)]A = Q({ (a, b, c, d, e), (a, b, c, d, e):

, a, b X, c, d Y, e Ak}). If (2) holds, (x, y, z, w, u) is said to generate the equational commutator in the algebras of Q.

25

Page 26: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

26

AAA80Theorem 3.6. Let Q be RCM. Then the equationalcommutator for Q and the commutator for Q in the sense of Kearnes-McKenzie coincide.

But the crucial fact concerning the Kearnes-McKenzie commutator is that any RCM quasivariety it satisfies (C1).

Thus, in view of Theorem 3.5, there exists a set (x, y, z, w, u) of quaternary commutator equations which generates the commutator in Q.

Page 27: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

27

Corollary 3.7. For any RCM Q, the commutator possesses a generating set (x, y, z, w, u) of quaternary commutatorequations.

Crucial issue: Is (x, y, z, w, u) finite?

Theorem 3.8. Let Q be finitely generated (i.e., Q = SP(K) forsome finite set K of finite algebras) with the additive equationalcommutator.

The equational commutator in Q is generated by a finite set(x, y, z, w, u) of quaternary commutator equations.

Page 28: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

28

Example. BA the variety of Boolean algebras, BA = SP(2). As BA is congruence-distributive, the commutator of any two

congruences on a Boolean algebra coincides with the meet of the two congruences.

Let be the equation

(x y) (z w) 1.

(Here , and 1 stand for the operation symbols of Booleanoperations of equivalence and join, respectively. 1 stands for

the unit element.) 

Page 29: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

29

is a quaternary commutator equation for BA.

The singleton set

(x, y, z, w) := { }

generates the (equational) commutator for BA.

( x, y, z, w) does not contain parametric variables.

Page 30: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

30

This means that:

For every Boolean algebra A and for every pair of sets X, Y A2,

[(X), (Y)]A =

({ (a, b, c, d), (a, b, c, d): a, b X, c, d Y}).

Page 31: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

31

4. PRIME ALGEBRAS

Definition 4.1. Q – quasivariety, A Q, - Q-congruence on A.

is prime (in the lattice ConQ(A)) if, for any 1, 2 ConQ(A),

[1, 2]A = implies 1 = or 2 = .

Page 32: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

32

A Q is prime (in Q) if 0A is prime in ConQ(A),

i.e., [1, 2]A = 0A holds for no pair of nonzero congruences 1, 2 ConQ(A).

QPRIME - the class of prime algebras in Q.

Generally QPRIME QRFSI.

If Q is RCD, then QPRIME = QRFSI.

Page 33: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

33

Theorem 4.2. Let Q be quasivariety with the additiveequational commutator and a generating set (x, y, z, w, u).Suppose A Q. The following conditions are equivalent:

(i) A is prime.

(ii) A (⊨ xyzw)( (u) (x, y, z, w, u) x y z w).

Page 34: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

34

Theorem 4.3. Let Q be a quasivariety with the additive equational commutator. (In particular, letQ be RCM.) The class

SP(QPRIME)

is the largest RCD quasivariety included in Q.

AAA 80

Page 35: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

35

Moreover QPRIME coincides with the class of all

relatively finitely subdirectly irreducible algebras inSP(QPRIME).

SP(QPRIME) is axiomatized by any basis for Qaugmented with a single quasi-identity.

Page 36: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

36

R - the variety of rings. (The existence of unit is not assumed.)

R is congruence permutable and hence congruence modular. Dziobiak [1990] - various characterizations of RCD

quasivarieties contained in R.Kearnes [1990] - other characterizations of RCD

subquasivarieties of congruence modular varieties.

Page 37: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

37

5. ITERATION PROCEDURES INVOLVING GENERATING SETS OF QUATERNARY COMMUTATOR EQUATIONS

Q finitely generated. = (x, y, z, w, u) finite generating set of quaternary commutator equations for Q.

(x, y, z, w, u) – behaves like a generalized disjunction in AAL for sentential logics (but does not share all properties of disjunction like e.g. idempotency)

binary operation symbol. Iterations:x1 x2,(x1 x2) x3,((x1 x2) x3) x4.

Page 38: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

38

We do the same with the set (x, y, z, w, u) (parameters mayoccur!)To simplify matters parameters are discarded. So

= (x, y, z, w)

Two infinite sequences of variables (different from x, y, z and w).

x1, x2, x3, …, xn, xn + 1, …

y1, y2, y3, …, yn, yn + 1, ….

are selected.

Page 39: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

39

Then a sequence of sets of equations

1, 2,…

is inductively defined so that n is built in the variables

x1,…, xn + 1 , y1,…, yn + 1 for n = 1,2,… .

n = n (x1, y1,…, x n + 1, y n + 1).

Page 40: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

40

Defintion 5.1.

(a) 1(x1, y1, x2, y2) := (x/ x1, y/y1, z/ x2, w/y2),

i.e., 1(x1, y1, x2, y2) is the result of the uniform replacingof x by x1, y by y1, z by x2, w by y2. (b) n + 1: = { (x/, y/, z/x n + 1, w/y n + 1) : n }, for all n 1.

Since the set (x, y, z, w) is finite, so are the sets n (x1, y1,…, x n + 1, y n + 1), for all n.

Page 41: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

41

Theorem 5.2. Q finitely generated with the additive equationalcommutator, (x, y, z, w, u) finite generating set of quaternarycommutator equations. Suppose Q is generated by a finite classof algebras each of which has at most m 1 elements, where m – 1 is a positive integer. Let

x 1,… , x m

be a sequence of individual variables of length m and let

y i, z i (1 i n, n = m(m 1)/ 2)

be an enumeration of the pairs xi, x j, where 1 i j m. Then Q obeys the equations

n - 1 (y1, z1, y2, z2,…, yn, zn, v n - 1).

Page 42: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

42

For instance for m = 4, and the variables

x1, x2, x3, x4,

we have that n = 6 and we get 6 pairs

x1, x2, x1, x3, x1, x4, x2, x3, x2, x4, x3, x4.

The resulting set of equations obtained from

5 (x1, y1, x2, y2, x3, y3, x4, y4, x5, y5, x6, y6, v 5)is(*) 5 (x1, x2, x1, x3, x1, x4, x2, x3, x2, x4, x3, x4, v 5)

Page 43: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

43

Thus if Q generated by a finite set of at most three-elementalgebras, Q satisfies equations

(*) 5 (x1, x2, x1, x3, x1, x4, x2, x3, x2, x4, x3, x4, v 5) .

Theorem 5.1 is a key element of a procedure of producingcertain iterations of quasi-identities of Q .

Theorem 5.1 implies that this procedure terminates in finitelymany steps (further steps yield only secondary quasi-identities).

Page 44: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

44

BibliographyK. Baker

[1974] Primitive satisfaction and equational problems for lattices and otheralgebras, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 190, 125-150.

[1977] Finite equational bases for finite algebras in a congruence distributive equational class, Advances in Mathematics 24, 207 – 243.W.J. Blok and D. Pigozzi

[1986] A finite basis theorem for quasivarieties, Algebra Universalis 22, 1-13.J. Czelakowski

[1998] Relative principal congruences in congruence-modularquasivarieties, Algebra Universalis 39, 81-101.

[2006] General theory of the commutator for deductive systems. Part I.Basic facts, Studia Logica 83, 183-214.

[2008] Additivity of the commutator and residuation, Reports onMathematical Logic 43, 109-132.

Page 45: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

45

W. Dziobiak, M. Maróti, R. McKenzie, A. Nurakunov[2009] The weak extension property and finite axiomatizability of quasivarieties,

Fundamenta Mathematicae 202, No.3, 199-222.R. Freese and R. McKenzie

[1987] "Commutator Theory for Congruence Modular Varieties", LondonMathematical Society Lecture Note Series 125, Cambridge University Press,Cambridge-New York.V. Gorbunov

[1984] A characterization of residually small quasivarieties (in Russian), DokladyAkademii Nauk SSSR 275, 204-207. H.P. Gumm

[1983] "Geometrical Methods in Congruence Modular Algebras", Memoirs of theAmerican Mathematical Society 45, No. 286.

Page 46: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

46

H.P. Gumm and A. Ursini[1984] Ideals in universal algebras, Algebra Universalis 19, 45-54.

J. Hagemann and C. Herrmann[1979] A concrete ideal multiplication for algebraic systems and its relation

to congruence distributivity, Arch. der Math. (Basel) 32, 234-245.C. Herrmann

[1979] Affine algebras in congruence modular varieties, Acta Sci. Math. (Seged)41, 119-125.K. Kearnes

[1990] Relatively congruence distributive subquasivarieties of a congruenecemodular variety, Bulletin of the Australian Mathematical Society 41, 87-96.K. Kearnes and R. McKenzie

[1992] Commutator theory for relatively modular quasivarieties, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 331, No. 2, 465 – 502.

Page 47: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

47

K. Kearnes and Á. Szendrei[1998] The relationship between two commutators, Iternational Journal

of Algebra and Computation 8, 497-531.R. Lyndon

[1951] Identities in two-valued calculi, Transactions of the AmericanMathematical Society 71, 457 – 465.

[1954] Identities in finite algebras, Proceedings of the AmericanMathematical Society 5, 9-9.M. Maróti and R. McKenzie

[2004] Finite basis problems and results for quasivarieties, Studia Logica78, 293-320.R. McKenzie

[1987] Finite equational bases for congruence modular varieties, AlgebraUniversalis 24, 224-250.

Page 48: AAA80, BĘDLEWO, POLAND June 2-6, 2010

48

A. Nurakunov[2001] Quasi-identities of congruence-distributive quasivarieties

of algebras, Sibirian Math. Journal 42, 108-118.D. Pigozzi

[1988] Finite basis theorems for relatively congruence-distributivequasivarieties, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 310, No. 2,499-533.A. Ursini

[1984] Prime ideals in universal algebra, Acta Universitatis Carolinae –Mathematica et Physica 25, No.1, 75-87.R. Villard

[2000] A finite basis theorem for residually small, congruence meet-semidistributive varieties, Journal of Symbolic Logic 65, 187-200.

[2001] Extending Baker’s theorem, Algebra Universalis 45, 335-344.