congruence lattices
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2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-78
Author(s):  
Claudia Muresan ◽  

We prove that an infinite (bounded) involution lattice and even pseudo-Kleene algebra can have any number of congruences between 2 and its number of elements or equalling its number of subsets, regardless of whether it has as many ideals as elements or as many ideals as subsets. Furthermore, when they have at most as many congruences as elements, these involution lattices and even pseudo-Kleene algebras can be chosen such that all their lattice congruences preserve their involutions, so that they have as many congruences as their lattice reducts. Under the Generalized Continuum Hypothesis, this means that an infinite (bounded) involution lattice and even pseudo-Kleene algebra can have any number of congruences between 2 and its number of subsets, regardless of its number of ideals. Consequently, the same holds for antiortholattices, a class of paraorthomodular Brouwer-Zadeh lattices. Regarding the shapes of the congruence lattices of the lattice{ ordered algebras in question, it turns out that, as long as the number of congruences is not strictly larger than the number of elements, they can be isomorphic to any nonsingleton well-ordered set with a largest element of any of those cardinalities, provided its largest element is strictly join-irreducible in the case of bounded lattice-ordered algebras and, in the case of antiortholattices with at least 3 distinct elements, provided that the predecessor of the largest element of that well-ordered set is strictly join{irreducible, as well; of course, various constructions can be applied to these algebras to obtain congruence lattices with different structures without changing the cardinalities in question. We point out sufficient conditions for analogous results to hold in an arbitrary variety.


2021 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Fioravanti
Keyword(s):  

AbstractWe investigate Mal’cev conditions described by those equations whose variables runs over the set of all compatible reflexive relations. Let $$p \le q$$ p ≤ q be an equation for the language $$\{\wedge , \circ ,+\}$$ { ∧ , ∘ , + } . We give a characterization of the class of all varieties which satisfy $$p \le q$$ p ≤ q over the set of all compatible reflexive relations. The aim is to find an analogon of the Pixley–Wille algorithm for conditions expressed by equations over the set of all compatible reflexive relations, and to characterize when an equation $$p \le q$$ p ≤ q expresses the same property when considered over the congruence lattices or over the sets of all compatible reflexive relations of algebras in a variety.


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 1275-1288
Author(s):  
Abd El-Mohsen Badawy ◽  
Miroslav Haviar ◽  
Miroslav Ploščica

AbstractThe notion of a congruence pair for principal MS-algebras, simpler than the one given by Beazer for K2-algebras [6], is introduced. It is proved that the congruences of the principal MS-algebras L correspond to the MS-congruence pairs on simpler substructures L°° and D(L) of L that were associated to L in [4].An analogy of a well-known Grätzer’s problem [11: Problem 57] formulated for distributive p-algebras, which asks for a characterization of the congruence lattices in terms of the congruence pairs, is presented here for the principal MS-algebras (Problem 1). Unlike a recent solution to such a problem for the principal p-algebras in [2], it is demonstrated here on the class of principal MS-algebras, that a possible solution to the problem, though not very descriptive, can be simple and elegant.As a step to a more descriptive solution of Problem 1, a special case is then considered when a principal MS-algebra L is a perfect extension of its greatest Stone subalgebra LS. It is shown that this is exactly when de Morgan subalgebra L°° of L is a perfect extension of the Boolean algebra B(L). Two examples illustrating when this special case happens and when it does not are presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Danica Jakubíková-Studenovská ◽  
Lucia Janičková
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 159 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-206
Author(s):  
Miroslav Ploščica
Keyword(s):  

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