symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category of spectra
A semigroup is called left/right weakly reductive if it coincides with the semigroup of its left/right translations.
We only define left weakly reductive semigroups, right weakly reductive semigroups are defined similarly.
Let be the set of left translations of . That is, this is the set of maps defined by . The semigroup , where denotes composition of maps, is called the semigroup of left translations of .
The map is then a morphism in the category of semigroups. We call left weakly reductive, if is an isomorphism.
Explicitly, and this is where the name comes from, if , and for all , then .
A weakly reductive semigroup is a semigroup that is both right and left weakly reductive.
A left weakly reductive semigroup can be thought of as a class of structures , where are binary operations, and is a ternary operation, satisfying the following axioms for all : .
Any left monoid, a semigroup with a left identity element, is a left weakly reductive semigroup. In particular, any monoid is weakly reductive.
Any left weakly reductive commutative semigroup is weakly reductive.
A monogenic semigroup that isn’t a group is not weakly reductive.
There exists unique smallest left weakly reductive semigroup which isn’t a left monoid. It can be defined as the idempotent semigroup such that for .
Last revised on December 29, 2020 at 06:54:08. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.