In mathematics, Green's relations are five equivalence relations that characterise the elements of a semigroup in terms of the principal ideals they generate. The relations are named for James Alexander Green, who introduced them in a paper of 1951. John Mackintosh Howie, a prominent semigroup theorist, described this work as "so all-pervading that, on encountering a new semigroup, almost the first question one asks is 'What are the Green relations like?'" (Howie 2002). The relations are useful for understanding the nature of divisibility in a semigroup; they are also valid for groups, but in this case tell us nothing useful, because groups always have divisibility. (In the same way, the ideals of a field are a much less rich environment for study than the ideals of a ring.)
Instead of working directly with a semigroup S, we define Green's relations over the monoid S1. (S1 is "S with an identity adjoined if necessary"; if S is not already a monoid, a new element is adjoined and defined to be an identity.) This ensures that principal ideals generated by some semigroup element do indeed contain that element. For an element a of S, the relevant ideals are:
For elements a and b of S, Green's relations L, R and J are defined by
Green used the lowercase blackletter , and for these relations, and wrote for a L b (and likewise for R and J). Mathematicians today tend to use script letters such as instead, and replace Green's modular arithmetic-style notation with the infix style used here. Ordinary letters are used for the equivalence classes.
The L and R relations are left-right dual to one another; theorems concerning one can be translated into similar statements about the other. For example, L is right-compatible: if a L b and c is another element of S, then ac L bc. Dually, R is left-compatible: if a R b, then ca R cb.
If S is commutative, then L, R and J coincide.
The remaining relations are derived from L and R. Their intersection is H:
The class Ha is the intersection of La and Ra. More generally, the intersection of any L-class with any R-class is either an H-class or the empty set.
Finally, D is defined by
As D is the smallest equivalence relation containing both L and R, we know that a D b implies a J b — so J contains D. In a finite semigroup, D and J are the same.
There is also a formulation of D in terms of equivalence classes, derived directly from the above definition:
It can be shown that within a D-class, all H-classes are the same size. For example, the transformation semigroup T4 contains four D-classes, within which the H-classes have 1, 2, 6, and 24 elements respectively.
Recent advances in the combinatorics of semigroups have used Green's relations to help enumerate semigroups with certain properties. A typical result (Satoh, Yama, and Tokizawa 1994) shows that there are exactly 1,843,120,128 non-equivalent semigroups of order 8, including 221,805 which are commutative; their work is based on a systematic exploration of possible D-classes. (By contrast, there are only five groups of order 8.)
The full transformation semigroup T3 consists of all functions from the set {1, 2, 3} to itself; there are 27 of these. Write (a b c) for the function which sends 1 to a, 2 to b, and 3 to c. Since T3 contains the identity map, (1 2 3), there is no need to adjoin an identity.
The egg-box diagram for T3 has three D-classes. They are also J-classes, because these relations coincide for a finite semigroup.
| (1 1 1) | (2 2 2) | (3 3 3) |
| (1 2 2), (2 1 1) | (1 3 3), (3 1 1) | (2 3 3), (3 2 2) |
| (2 1 2), (1 2 1) | (3 1 3), (1 3 1) | (3 2 3), (2 3 2) |
| (2 2 1), (1 1 2) | (3 3 1), (1 1 3) | (3 3 2), (2 2 3) |
| (1 2 3), (2 3 1), (3 1 2), (1 3 2), (3 2 1), (2 1 3) |
In T3, two functions are L-related if and only if they have the same image. Such functions appear in the same column of the table above. Likewise, the functions f and g are R-related if and only if
The elements in bold are the idempotents. Any H-class containing one of these is a (maximal) subgroup. In particular, the third D-class is isomorphic to the symmetric group S3. There are also six subgroups of order 2, and three of order 1 (as well as subgroups of these subgroups). Six elements of T3 are not in any subgroup.
There are essentially two ways of generalising an algebraic theory. One is to change its definitions so that it covers more or different objects; the other, more subtle way, is to find some desirable outcome of the theory and consider alternative ways of reaching that conclusion.
Following the first route, analogous versions of Green's relations have been defined for semirings (Grillet 1970) and rings (Petro 2002). Some, but not all, of the properties associated with the relations in semigroups carry over to these cases. Staying within the world of semigroups, Green's relations can be extended to cover relative ideals, which are subsets that are only ideals with respect to a subsemigroup (Wallace 1963).
For the second kind of generalisation, researchers have concentrated on properties of bijections between L- and R- classes. If x R y, then it is always possible to find bijections between Lx and Ly that are R-class-preserving. (That is, if two elements of an L-class are in the same R-class, then their images under a bijection will still be in the same R-class.) The dual statement for x L y also holds. These bijections are right and left translations, restricted to the appropriate equivalence classes. The question that arises is: how else could there be such bijections?
Suppose that Λ and Ρ are semigroups of partial transformations of some semigroup S. Under certain conditions, it can be shown that if x Ρ = y Ρ, with x ρ1 = y and y ρ2 = x, then the restrictions
We call (Λ, Ρ) a Green's pair. There are several choices of partial transformation semigroup that yield the original relations. One example would be to take Λ to be the semigroup of all left translations on S1, restricted to S, and Ρ the corresponding semigroup of restricted right translations.
These definitions are due to Clark and Carruth (1980). They subsume Wallace's work, as well as various other generalised definitions proposed in the mid-1970s. The full axioms are fairly lengthy to state; informally, the most important requirements are that both Λ and Ρ should contain the identity transformation, and that elements of Λ should commute with elements of Ρ.
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