In abstract algebra, the term associator is used in different ways as a measure of the non-associativity of an algebraic structure. Associators are commonly studied as triple systems.

Ring theory edit

For a non-associative ring or algebra R, the associator is the multilinear map   given by

 

Just as the commutator

 

measures the degree of non-commutativity, the associator measures the degree of non-associativity of R. For an associative ring or algebra the associator is identically zero.

The associator in any ring obeys the identity

 

The associator is alternating precisely when R is an alternative ring.

The associator is symmetric in its two rightmost arguments when R is a pre-Lie algebra.

The nucleus is the set of elements that associate with all others: that is, the n in R such that

 

The nucleus is an associative subring of R.

Quasigroup theory edit

A quasigroup Q is a set with a binary operation   such that for each a, b in Q, the equations   and   have unique solutions x, y in Q. In a quasigroup Q, the associator is the map   defined by the equation

 

for all a, b, c in Q. As with its ring theory analog, the quasigroup associator is a measure of nonassociativity of Q.

Higher-dimensional algebra edit

In higher-dimensional algebra, where there may be non-identity morphisms between algebraic expressions, an associator is an isomorphism

 

Category theory edit

In category theory, the associator expresses the associative properties of the internal product functor in monoidal categories.

See also edit

References edit

  • Bremner, M.; Hentzel, I. (March 2002). "Identities for the Associator in Alternative Algebras". Journal of Symbolic Computation. 33 (3): 255–273. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.85.1905. doi:10.1006/jsco.2001.0510.
  • Schafer, Richard D. (1995) [1966]. An Introduction to Nonassociative Algebras. Dover. ISBN 0-486-68813-5.