On weakly commutative ordered semigroups (Q1375905)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On weakly commutative ordered semigroups
scientific article

    Statements

    On weakly commutative ordered semigroups (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    29 June 1998
    0 references
    A partially ordered semigroup \((S, \cdot, \leq)\) is ``weakly commutative'' if for all \(a,b \in S\) there exist \(x\in S\) and a nonnegative integer \(n\) such that \((ab)^n \leq bxa\). It is ``archimedean'' if for all \(a,b\in S\) there exist \(x,y\in S\) and \(m\) such that \(a^m\leq xby\). It was shown by \textit{N. Kehayopulu}, \textit{P. Kiriakuli}, \textit{S. Hanumantha Rao} and \textit{P. Lakshimi} [Semigroup Forum 41, 373-376 (1990; Zbl 0708.06011)] that if \((S,\cdot,\leq)\) is a ``weakly commutative'' partially ordered semigroup with greatest element, then \((S,\cdot,\leq)\) is a semilattice of ``archimedian'' semigroups. In the paper under review the analogous result is proved for ``weakly commutative'' semigroups \((S, \cdot, \leq)\) without greatest element by use of the same semilattice congruence. Again, by a counterexample it is shown that the decomposition is not unique. It is unique if only complete semilattice congruences are considered (see the review above).
    0 references
    0 references
    weakly commutative
    0 references
    archimedean
    0 references
    semilattice of ordered semigroups
    0 references
    partially ordered semigroup
    0 references
    semilattice congruence
    0 references
    decomposition
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references