Monoid: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Chris Day
No edit summary
imported>Richard Pinch
(def of free monoid)
Line 36: Line 36:


A monoid is a submonoid of a group if and only if it satisfies the cancellation property.
A monoid is a submonoid of a group if and only if it satisfies the cancellation property.
==Free monoid==
The '''free monoid''' on a set ''G'' of ''generators'' is the set of all words on ''G'', the finite sequences of elements of ''G'', with the binary operation being concatenation (juxtaposition).  The identity element is the empty (zero-length) word.  The free monoid on one generator ''g'' may be identified with the monoid of non-negative integers
:<math> n \leftrightarrow g^n = gg \cdots g . \,</math>

Revision as of 15:26, 13 November 2008

This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

In algebra, a monoid is a set equipped with a binary operation satisfying certain properties similar to but less stringent than those of a group. A motivating example of a monoid is the set of positive integers with multiplication as the operation.

Formally, a monoid is set M with a binary operation satisfying the following conditions:

  • M is closed under ;
  • The operation is associative
  • There is an identity element such that
for all x in M.

A commutative monoid is one which satisfies the further property that for all x and y in M. Commutative monoids are often written additively.

An element x of a monoid is invertible if there exists an element y such that : the inverse may be written as . The product of invertible elements is invertible,

and so the invertible elements form a group, the unit group of M.

A submonoid of M is a subset S of M which contains the identity element I and is closed under the binary operation.

A monoid homomorphism f from monoid to is a map from M to N satisfying

  • ;

Examples

  • The non-negative integers under addition form a commutative monoid, with zero as identity element.
  • The positive integers under multiplication form a commutative monoid, with one as identity element.
  • Square matrices under matrix multiplication form a monoid, with the identity matrix as the identity element: this monoid is not in general commutative.
  • Every group is a monoid, by "forgetting" the inverse operation.

Cancellation property

A monoid satisfies the cancellation property if

and

A monoid is a submonoid of a group if and only if it satisfies the cancellation property.

Free monoid

The free monoid on a set G of generators is the set of all words on G, the finite sequences of elements of G, with the binary operation being concatenation (juxtaposition). The identity element is the empty (zero-length) word. The free monoid on one generator g may be identified with the monoid of non-negative integers