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.[1] A semigroup S is nowhere commutative if and only if any two elements of S are inverses of each other.[1]
Nowhere commutative semigroups can be characterized in several different ways. If S is a semigroup then the following statements are equivalent[2]:
Even though, by definition, the rectangular bands are concrete semigroups, they have the defect that their definition is formulated not in terms of the basic binary operation in the semigroup. The approach via the definition of nowhere commutative semigroups rectifies the defect.[2]
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 (S/R) × (S/L) 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.