Quantale

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In mathematics, quantales are certain partially ordered algebraic structures that generalize locales (point free topologies) as well as various multiplicative lattices of ideals from ring theory and functional analysis (C*-algebras, von Neumann algebras).{{Cite book |last1=Paeska |first1=Jan |last2=Slesinger |first2=Radek |chapter=A Representation Theorem for Quantale Valued sup-algebras |date=2018 |title=2018 IEEE 48th International Symposium on Multiple-Valued Logic (ISMVL) |chapter-url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8416927 |pages=91–96 |doi=10.1109/ISMVL.2018.00024 |arxiv=1810.09561 |isbn=978-1-5386-4464-5 |via=IEEE Xplore}} Quantales are sometimes referred to as complete residuated semigroups.

Overview

A quantale is a complete lattice Q with an associative binary operation \ast\colon Q \times Q \to Q, called its multiplication, satisfying a distributive property such that

:x*\left(\bigvee_{i\in I}{y_i}\right) = \bigvee_{i\in I}(x*y_i)

and

:\left(\bigvee_{i\in I}{y_i}\right)*{x}=\bigvee_{i\in I}(y_i*x)

for all x, y_i \in Q and i \in I (here I is any index set). The quantale is unital if it has an identity element e for its multiplication:

:x*e = x = e*x

for all x \in Q. In this case, the quantale is naturally a monoid with respect to its multiplication \ast.

A unital quantale may be defined equivalently as a monoid in the category Sup of complete join-semilattices.

A unital quantale is an idempotent semiring under join and multiplication.

A unital quantale in which the identity is the top element of the underlying lattice is said to be strictly two-sided (or simply integral).

A commutative quantale is a quantale whose multiplication is commutative. A frame, with its multiplication given by the meet operation, is a typical example of a strictly two-sided commutative quantale. Another simple example is provided by the unit interval together with its usual multiplication.

An idempotent quantale is a quantale whose multiplication is idempotent. A frame is the same as an idempotent strictly two-sided quantale.

An involutive quantale is a quantale with an involution

:(xy)^\circ = y^\circ x^\circ

that preserves joins:

:\biggl(\bigvee_{i\in I}{x_i}\biggr)^\circ =\bigvee_{i\in I}(x_i^\circ).

A quantale homomorphism is a map f\colon Q_1 \to Q_2 that preserves joins and multiplication for all x, y, x_i \in Q_1 and i \in I:

:f(xy) = f(x) f(y),

:f\left(\bigvee_{i \in I}{x_i}\right) = \bigvee_{i \in I} f(x_i).

See also

References

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  • {{springer|id=Q/q130010|title=Quantale|author=C.J. Mulvey}} [http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Quantale&oldid=42430]
  • J. Paseka, J. Rosicky, Quantales, in: B. Coecke, D. Moore, A. Wilce, (Eds.), Current Research in Operational Quantum Logic: Algebras, Categories and Languages, Fund. Theories Phys., vol. 111, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000, pp. 245–262.
  • M. Piazza, M. Castellan, Quantales and structural rules. Journal of Logic and Computation, 6 (1996), 709–724.
  • K. Rosenthal, Quantales and Their Applications, Pitman Research Notes in Mathematics Series 234, Longman Scientific & Technical, 1990.

Category:Order theory

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