Lattice Universal Semigroup Varieties
22/12/2009 Terça-feira, 22 de Dezembro de 2009, 14h30, Anfiteatro
Inna Mikhaylova (Ural State University, Russia)
A semigroup variety $\mathcal V$ is called \emph{lattice universal} if its
subvariety lattice $L(\mathcal V)$ contains an interval dual to the
partition lattice on a countably infinite set. (In this case the subvariety
lattice of every variety of algebras of at most countable similarity type
embeds into $L(\mathcal V)$, and this justifies the name.) The first example
of a lattice universal semigroup variety was given by Burris and Nelson in
1971: this is the variety defined by the identity $x^2=x^3$. In 1976
Je\v{z}ek showed that the variety of semigroups with 0 in which $x^2=0$ also
is lattice universal. We have classified lattice universal varieties in a
large class of varieties. Recall the definition of the so-called Zimin words
$Z_n$: one sets $Z_1=x_1$ and $Z_{n+1}=Z_nx_{n+1}Z_n$ for
$n=1,2,\dotsc$.
\begin{theorem}
Suppose that a semigroup variety $\mathcal V$ is defined by identities
depending on at most $n$ variables and all periodic groups in $\mathcal V$
are locally finite. Then $\mathcal V$ is lattice universal if and only if it
does not satisfy any non-trivial identity of the form $Z_{n+1}=w$.
\end{theorem}
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