Brandt semigroup

In mathematics, Brandt semigroups are completely 0-simple inverse semigroups. In other words, they are semigroups without proper ideals and which are also inverse semigroups. They are built in the same way as completely 0-simple semigroups:

Let G be a group and I, J be non-empty sets. Define a matrix P of dimension |I|\times |J| with entries in G^0=G \cup \{0\}.

Then, it can be shown that every 0-simple semigroup is of the form S=(I\times G^0\times J) with the operation (i,a,j)*(k,b,n)=(i,a p_{jk} b,n).

As Brandt semigroups are also inverse semigroups, the construction is more specialized and in fact, I = J (Howie 1995). Thus, a Brandt semigroup has the form S=(I\times G^0\times I) with the operation (i,a,j)*(k,b,n)=(i,a p_{jk} b,n).

Moreover, the matrix P is diagonal with only the identity element e of the group G in its diagonal.

Remarks

1) The idempotents have the form (i,e,i) where e is the identity of G

2) There are equivalent way to define the Brandt semigroup. Here is another one:

ac=bc≠0 or ca=cb≠0 ⇒ a=b

ab≠0 and bc≠0 ⇒ abc≠0

If a  0 then there is unique x,y,z for which xa = a, ay = a, za = y.

For all idempotents e and f nonzero, eSf  0

See also

Special classes of semigroups

References