Skew lattice
In abstract algebra, a skew lattice is an algebraic structure that is a non-commutative generalization of a lattice. While the term skew lattice can be used to refer to any non-commutative generalization of a lattice, over the past twenty years it has been used primarily as follows.
Definition
A skew lattice is a set S equipped with two associative, idempotent  binary operations 
 and 
, called meet and join, that satisfy the following dual pair of absorption laws
  and  
.Given that 
 and 
 are associative and idempotent, these identities are equivalent to the dualities:
 if 
 and  
 if 
.[1] Historical background
For over 60 years, noncommutative variations of lattices have been studied with differing motivations.  For some the motivation has been an interest in the conceptual boundaries of lattice theory; for others it was a search for noncommutative forms of logic and Boolean algebra; and for others it has been the behavior of idempotents in rings.  A noncommutative lattice, generally speaking, is an algebra 
 where 
 and 
 are associative, idempotent binary operations connected by absorption identities guaranteeing that 
 in some way dualizes 
. The precise identities chosen depends upon the underlying motivation, with differing choices producing distinct varieties of algebras.  Pascual Jordan, motivated by questions in quantum logic, initiated a study of noncommutative lattices in his 1949 paper, Über Nichtkommutative Verbande,[2] choosing the absorption identities

He referred to those algebras satisfying them as Schrägverbände. By varying or augmenting these identities, Jordan and others obtained a number of varieties of noncommutative lattices. Beginning with Jonathan Leech's 1989 paper, Skew lattices in rings,[3] skew lattices as defined above have been the primary objects of study. This was aided by previous results about bands. This was especially the case for many of the basic properties.
Basic properties
Natural partial order and natural quasiorder
In a skew lattice 
, the natural partial order is defined by 
 if 
, or dually, 
. The natural preorder on 
 is given by 
 if 
 or dually 
. While 
 and 
 agree on lattices, 
 properly refines 
 in the noncommutative case. The induced natural equivalence 
 is defined by 
 if 
, that is, 
and 
 or dually, 
 and 
. The blocks of the partition 
 are
lattice ordered by 
 if 
 and 
 exist such that 
. This permits us to write Hasse diagrams of skew lattices such as the following pair:

E.g., in the diagram on the left above, that 
 and 
 are 
 related is expressed by the dashed
segment. The slanted lines reveal the natural partial order between elements of the distinct 
-classes. The elements 
, 
 and 
 form the singleton 
-classes.
Rectangular Skew Lattices
Skew lattices consisting of a single 
-class are called rectangular. They are characterized by the equivalent identities: 
, 
 and 
. Rectangular skew lattices are isomorphic to skew lattices having the following construction (and conversely): given nonempty
sets 
 and 
, on 
 define 
 and 
. The 
-class partition of a skew lattice 
 , as indicated in the above diagrams, is the unique partition of 
 into its maximal rectangular subalgebras, Moreover, 
 is a congruence with the induced quotient algebra 
 being the maximal lattice image of 
 , thus making every skew lattice 
 a lattice of rectangular subalgebras. This is the Clifford-McLean Theorem for skew lattices, first given for bands separately by Clifford and McLean. It is also known as the First Decomposition Theorem for skew lattices.
Right (left) handed skew lattices and the Kimura factorization
A skew lattice is right-handed if it satisfies the identity 
 or dually, 
.
These identities essentially assert that 
 and 
 in each 
-class. Every skew lattice 
 has a unique maximal right-handed image 
 where the congruence 
 is defined by 
 if both 
 and 
(or dually, 
 and 
). Likewise a skew lattice is left-handed if 
 and 
 in each 
-class. Again the maximal left-handed image of a skew lattice 
 is the image 
 where the congruence 
 is defined in dual fashion to 
. Many examples of skew lattices are either right or left-handed. In the lattice of congruences, 
 and 
 is the identity congruence 
. The induced epimorphism 
 factors through both induced epimorphisms 
 and 
. Setting 
, the homomorphism 
defined by 
, induces an isomorphism 
. This is the Kimura factorization of 
 into a fibred product of its maximal right and left-handed images.

Like the Clifford-McLean Theorem, Kimura factorization (or the Second Decomposition Theorem for skew lattices) was first given for regular bands (that satisfy the middle absorption
identity, 
 ). Indeed both 
 and 
 are regular band operations. The above symbols 
, 
 and 
 come, of course, from basic semigroup theory.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
Subvarieties of skew lattices
Skew lattices form a variety. Rectangular skew lattices, left-handed and right-handed skew lattices all form subvarieties that are central to the basic structure theory of skew lattices. Here are several more.
Symmetric Skew Lattices
A skew lattice S is symmetric if for any 
 , 
 if 
. Occurrences of commutation are thus unambiguous for such skew lattices, with subsets of pairwise commuting elements generating commutative subalgebras, i.e, sublattices. ( This is not true for skew lattices in general.) Equational bases for this subvariety, first given by Spinks[11] are:
 and 
.
A lattice section of a skew lattice 
 is a sublattice 
 of 
 meeting each 
-class of 
 at a single element. 
 is thus an internal copy of the lattice 
 with the composition 
 being an isomorphism. All symmetric skew lattices for which |S/D| \leq \aleph_0 , admit a lattice section.[10] Symmetric or not, having a lattice section 
 guarantees that 
 also has internal copies of 
 and 
 given respectively by 
 and 
, where 
 and 
 are the 
 and 
 congruence classes of 
 in 
 . Thus 
 and 
 are isomorphisms.[8] This leads to a commuting diagram of embedding dualizing the preceding Kimura diagram.

Cancellative Skew Lattices
A skew lattice is cancellative if 
 and 
 implies 
 and likewise 
 and 
 implies 
. Cancellatice skew lattices are symmetric and can be shown to form a variety. Unlike lattices, they need not be distributive, and conversely.
Distributive Skew Lattices
Distributive skew lattices are determined by the identities:
  (D1 )
 (D’1 )
Unlike lattices, (D1 ) and (D‘1 ) are not equivalent in general for skew lattices, but they are for symmetric skew lattices.[9][12][13] The condition (D1 ) can be strengthened to 
 (D2 ) in which case (D‘1 ) is a consequence. A skew lattice 
 satisfies both (D2) and its dual, 
, if and only if it factors as the product of a distributive lattice and a rectangular skew lattice. In this latter case (D2 ) can be strengthened to 
 and 
. (D3 )
On its own, (D3 ) is equivalent to (D2 ) when symmetry is added.[3] We thus have six subvarieties of skew lattices determined respectively by (D1), (D2), (D3) and their duals.
Normal Skew Lattices
As seen above, 
 and 
 satisfy the identity 
. Bands satisfying the stronger identity, 
, are called normal. A skew lattice is normal skew if it satisfies

For each element a in a normal skew lattice 
, the set 
 defined by { 
} or equivalently {
} is a sublattice of 
, and conversely. (Thus normal skew lattices have also been called local lattices.) When both 
 and 
 are normal, 
 splits isomorphically into a product 
 of a lattice 
 and a rectangular skew lattice 
, and conversely. Thus both normal skew lattices and split skew lattices form varieties. Returning to distribution, 
 so that 
 characterizes the variety of distributive, normal skew lattices, and (D3) characterizes the variety of symmetric, distributive, normal skew lattices.
Categorical Skew Lattices
A skew lattice is categorical if nonempty composites of coset bijections are coset bijections. Categorical skew lattices form a variety. Skew lattices in rings and normal skew lattices are examples
of algebras on this variety.[4] Let 
 with 
, 
 and 
, 
 be the coset bijection from 
 to 
 taking 
 to 
, 
 be the coset bijection from 
 to 
 taking 
 to 
 and finally 
 be the coset bijection from 
 to 
 taking 
 to 
. A skew lattice 
 is categorical if one always has the equality 
, ie. , if the
composite partial bijection 
 if nonempty is a coset bijection from a 
 -coset of 
 to an 
-coset
of 
 . That is 
.
All distributive skew lattices are categorical. Though symmetric skew lattices might not be. In a sense they reveal the independence between the properties of symmetry and distributivity.[3][4][6][9][10][11][13][14]
Skew Boolean algebras
A zero element in a skew lattice S is an element 0 of S such that for all 
, 
 or, dually, 
. (0)
A Boolean skew lattice is a symmetric, distributive normal skew lattice with 0, 
, such that 
 is a Boolean lattice for each 
. Given such skew lattice S, a difference operator \ is defined by x\ y = 
 where the latter is evaluated in the Boolean lattice 
.[1] In the presence of (D3) and (0), \ is characterized by the identities:
 and 
One thus has a variety of skew Boolean algebras 
 characterized by identities (D3), (0) and (S B). A primitive skew Boolean algebra consists of 0 and a single non-0 D-class. Thus it is the result of adjoining a 0 to a rectangular skew lattice D via (0) with 
, if 
and 
 otherwise. Every skew Boolean algebra is a subdirect product of primitive algebras. Skew Boolean algebras play an important role in the study of discriminator varieties and other generalizations in universal algebra of Boolean behavior.
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
[19]
[20] 
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24] 
[25]
Skew lattices in rings
Let 
 be a ring  and let 
 denote the set of all Idempotents in 
. For all 
 set 
 and 
.
Clearly 
 but also 
 is associative. If a subset 
 is closed under 
 and 
, then 
 is a distributive, cancellative skew lattice. To find such skew lattices in 
 one looks at bands in 
, especially the ones that are maximal with respect to some constraint. In fact, every multiplicative band in 
 that is maximal with respect to being right regular (= ) is also closed under 
 and so forms a right-handed skew lattice. In general, every right regular band in 
 generates a right-handed skew lattice in 
. Dual remarks also hold for left regular bands (bands satisfying the identity 
) in 
. Maximal regular bands need not to be closed under 
 as defined; counterexamples are easily found using multiplicative rectangular bands. These cases are closed, however, under the cubic variant of 
 defined by 
 since in these cases 
 reduces to 
 to give the dual rectangular band. By replacing the condition of regularity by normality 
, every maximal normal multiplicative band 
 in 
 is also closed under 
 with 
, where 
, forms a Boolean skew lattice. When 
 itself is closed under multiplication, then it is a normal band and thus forms a Boolean skew lattice. In fact, any skew Boolean algebra can be embedded into such an algebra.[26] When A has a multiplicative identity 
, the condition that 
 is multiplicatively closed is well-known to imply that 
 forms a Boolean algebra. Skew lattices in rings continue to be a good source of examples and motivation.[23][27][28][29][30]
Primitive skew lattices
Skew lattices consisting of exactly two D-classes are called primitive skew lattices.  Given such a skew lattice 
 with 
-classes 
 in 
, then for any 
 and 
, the subsets
{
} 
   and   
 {
} 
are called, respectively, cosets of A in B and cosets of B in A.  These cosets partition B and A with 
 and 
.  Cosets are always rectangular subalgebras in their 
-classes.  What is more, the partial order 
 induces a coset bijection 
 defined by:
  iff  
, for 
 and 
.
Collectively, coset bijections describe 
 between the subsets 
 and 
.  They also determine 
 and 
 for pairs of elements from distinct 
-classes.  Indeed, given 
 and 
, let 
 be the
cost bijection between the cosets 
 in 
 and 
 in 
.  Then:
  and 
.
In general, given 
 and 
 with 
 and 
, then 
 belong to a common 
- coset in 
 and 
 belong to a common 
-coset in 
 if and only if 
.  Thus each coset bijection is, in some sense, a maximal collection of mutually parallel pairs 
.
Every primitive skew lattice 
 factors as the fibred product of its maximal left and right- handed primitive images 
.  Right-handed primitive skew lattices are constructed as follows.  Let 
 and 
 be partitions of disjoint nonempty sets 
 and 
, where all 
 and 
 share a common size.  For each pair 
 pick a fixed bijection 
 from 
 onto 
.  On 
 and 
 separately set 
 and 
; but given 
 and 
, set
 and 
where 
 and 
 with 
 belonging to the cell 
 of 
 and 
 belonging to the cell 
 of 
.  The various 
 are the coset bijections.  This is illustrated in the following partial Hasse diagram where 
 and the arrows indicate the 
 -outputs and 
 from 
 and 
.

One constructs left-handed primitive skew lattices in dual fashion. All right [left] handed primitive skew lattices can be constructed in this fashion.[3]
The coset structure of skew lattices
A nonrectangular skew lattice 
 is covered by its maximal primitive skew lattices: given comparable 
-classes 
 in 
, 
 forms a maximal primitive subalgebra of 
 and every 
-class in 
 lies in such a subalgebra.  The coset structures on these primitive subalgebras combine to determine the outcomes 
 and 
 at least when 
 and 
 are comparable under 
.  It turns out that 
 and 
 are determined in general by cosets and their bijections, although in
a slightly less direct manner than the 
-comparable case.  In particular, given two incomparable D-classes A and B with join D-class J and meet D-class 
 in 
, interesting connections arise between the two coset decompositions of J (or M) with respect to A and B.[4]

Thus a skew lattice may be viewed as a coset atlas of rectangular skew lattices placed on the vertices of a lattice and coset bijections between them, the latter seen as partial isomorphisms
between the rectangular algebras with each coset bijection determining a corresponding pair of cosets.  This perspective gives, in essence, the Hasse diagram of the skew lattice, which is easily
drawn in cases of relatively small order.  (See the diagrams in Section 3 above.) Given a chain of D-classes 
 in 
, one has three sets of coset bijections: from A to B, from B to C and from A to C.  In general, given coset bijections 
 and 
, the composition of partial bijections 
 could be empty.  If it is not, then a unique coset bijection 
 exists such that 
.  (Again, 
 is a bijection between a pair of cosets in 
 and 
.)  This inclusion can be strict.  It is always an equality (given 
) on a given skew lattice S precisely when S is categorical.  In this case, by including the identity maps on each rectangular D-class and adjoining empty bijections between properly comparable D-classes, one has a category of rectangular algebras and coset bijections between them.   The simple examples in Section 3 are categorical.
See also
References
- 1 2 Leech, J, Skew lattices in rings, Algebra Universalis, 26(1989), 48-72.
 - ↑ Jordan, P. Uber Nichtkommutative Verbände, Arch. Math. 2 (1949), 56–59.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 Leech, J, Skew lattices in rings, Algebra Universalis, 26(1989), 48-72
 - 1 2 3 4 Leech, J, Recent developments in the theory of skew lattices, Semigroup Forum, 52(1996), 7-24.
 - ↑ Leech, J, Magic squares, finite planes and simple quasilattices, Ars Combinatoria 77(2005), 75-96.
 - 1 2 Leech, J, The geometry of skew lattices, Semigroup Forum, 52(1993), 7-24.
 - ↑ Leech, J, Normal skew lattices, Semigroup Forum, 44(1992), 1-8.
 - 1 2 Cvetko-Vah, K, Internal decompositions of skew lattices, Communications in Algebra, 35 (2007), 243-247
 - 1 2 3 Cvetko-Vah, K, A new proof of Spinks’ Theorem, Semigroup Forum 73 (2006), 267-272.
 - 1 2 3 Laslo, G and Leech, J, Green’s relations on noncommutative lattices, Acta Sci. Math. (Szeged), 68 (2002), 501-533.
 - 1 2 Spinks, M, Automated deduction in non-commutative lattice theory, Tech. Report 3/98, Monash U, GSCIT, 1998
 - ↑ Spinks, M, Automated deduction in non-commutative lattice theory, Tech. Report 3/98, Monash University, Gippsland School of Computing and Information Technology, June 1998
 - 1 2 Spinks, M, On middle distributivity for skew lattices, Semigroup Forum 61 (2000). 341-345.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, Karin ; Kinyon, M. ; Leech, J. ; Spinks, M. Skew Lattices with cancel lation. Pre-Print. Journal of Algebra and Its Applications, 2008
 - ↑ Bignall, R. J., Quasiprimal Varieties and Components of Universal Algebras, Dissertation, The Flinders University of South Australia, 1976.
 - ↑ Bignall, R J, A non-commutative multiple-valued logic, Proc. 21st International Symposium on Multiple-valued Logic, 1991, IEEE Computer Soc. Press, 49-54.
 - ↑ Bignall, R J and J Leech, Skew Boolean algebras and discriminator varieties, Algebra Universalis, 33(1995), 387-398.
 - ↑ Bignall, R J and M Spinks, Propositional skew Boolean logic, Proc. 26th International Symposium on Multiple-valued Logic, 1996, IEEE Computer Soc. Press, 43-48.
 - ↑ Bignall, R J and M Spinks, Implicative BCS-algebra subreducts of skew Boolean algebras, Scientiae Mathematicae Japonicae, 58 (2003), 629-638.
 - ↑ Bignall, R J and M Spinks, On binary discriminator varieties (I): Implicative BCS-algebras, International Journal of Algebra and Computation, to appear.
 - ↑ Cornish, W H, Boolean skew algebras, Acta Math. Acad. Sci. Hung., 36 (1980), 281-291.
 - ↑ Leech, J, Skew Boolean algebras, Algebra Universalis, 27(1990), 497-506.
 - 1 2 Leech and Spinks, Skew Boolean algebras generated from generalized Boolean algebras, Algebra Universalis 58 (2008), 287-302, 307-311.
 - ↑ Spinks, M, Contributions to the Theory of Pre-BCK Algebras, Monash University Dissertation, 2002.
 - ↑ Spinks, M and R Veroff, Axiomatizing the skew Boolean propositional calculus, J.Automated Reasoning, 37 (2006), 3-20.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, K, Skew lattices in matrix rings, Algebra Universalis 53 (2005), 471-479.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, K, Pure skew lattices in rings, Semigroup Forum 68 (2004), 268-279.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, K, Pure ∇-bands, Semigroup Forum 71 (2005), 93-101.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, K, Skew lattices in rings, Dissertation, University of Ljubljana, 2005.
 - ↑ Cvetko-Vah, K and J Leech, Associativity of the ∇-operation on bands in rings, Semigroup Forum 76 (2008), 32-50