1 / 7

Definitions

Definitions. A loop is a set L with a binary operation  such that 1) for each a,b in L, there is a unique x in L such that ax=b and there is a unique y in L such that ya=b. 2) there exists a unique element 1 in L such that for every a in L, 1a=a=a1.

josh
Télécharger la présentation

Definitions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Definitions

  2. A loop is a set L with a binary operation  such that 1) for each a,b in L, there is a unique x in L such that ax=b and there is a unique y in L such that ya=b. 2) there exists a unique element 1 in L such that for every a in L, 1a=a=a1. We will simply write ab in place of ab. A (right) Bol loop is a loop L in which the identity [(xy)z]y = x[(yz)y] holds for all x,y,z in L. 

  3. The center Z(L) of a loop L is the set of elements z in L such that for all a, b in L, a(zb)=(az)b=(za)b=z(ab)=(ab)z=a(bz) The center of a loop is a normal subloop (the kernel of a loop homomorphism). A loop is centrally nilpotent of class n if the upper central series of L {1}Z=Z1Z2…Zn…, where Zi+1 is the full preimage in L of the center of L/Zi, stabilizes with Zn=L, but Zn-1L.

  4. For a, b, c in L, The commutator (a,b) is defined by ab=(ba)(a,b) The associator (a,b,c) is defined by (ab)c=[a(bc)](a,b,c) The commutator/associator subloop L is the subloop of L generated by all commutators and all associators.

  5. If L is of nilpotence class 2, then Z2=L, so that L/Z(L) is an abelian group. Therefore Z(L) contains all commutators and all associators. If zZ(L), then (za,b)=(a,zb)=(ab) (za,b,c)=(a,zb,c)=(a,b,zc)=(a,b,c) Also commutators and associators can be pulled to the right in all equations. E.g., [x(x,y)][y(x,y,z)]=(xy)(x,y)(x,y,z) 

More Related