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Minimal noncommutative varieties and power varieties
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    Minimal noncommutative varieties and power varieties (English)
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    1984
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    A variety of finite monoids is a class of finite monoids closed under taking submonoids, quotients and \textit{finite} direct products. A language L is a subset of a finitely generated free monoid. The variety theorem of Eilenberg sets up a one to one correspondence between varieties of finite monoids and classes of languages called, appropriately, varieties of languages. If V is a variety of monoids, let PV denote the variety generated by the power set monoids PM, \(M\in V\). The authors show that for any variety, one has \(P^ 3V=P^ 4V\). In fact, if V contains a noncommutative monoid, then \(P^ 3V\) is the variety of all finite monoids; and if V is commutative, then \(P^ 2V=P^ 3V\), a result obtained already by Perrot and Straubing. The proof of the above theorem uses the following result, which the authors also prove: if V is a minimal noncommutative variety, then V is generated either by a noncommutative metabelian group or by the syntactic monoid of one of the languages \(\{a,b\}^*a\), \(a\{a,b\}^*\) or \(\{\) a\(b\}\).
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    variety of finite monoids
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    finitely generated free monoid
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    variety theorem of Eilenberg
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    varieties of languages
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    minimal noncommutative variety
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