Finiteness and Regularity in Semigroups and Formal Languages e-bog
875,33 DKK
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The aim of this monograph is to present some recent research work on the combinatorial aspects of the theory of semigroups which are of great inter- est for both algebra and theoretical computer science. This research mainly concerns that part of combinatorics of finite and infinite words over a finite alphabet which is usually called the theory of "e;unavoidable"e; regularities. The un...
E-bog
875,33 DKK
Forlag
Springer
Udgivet
6 december 2012
Genrer
PBF
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9783642598494
The aim of this monograph is to present some recent research work on the combinatorial aspects of the theory of semigroups which are of great inter- est for both algebra and theoretical computer science. This research mainly concerns that part of combinatorics of finite and infinite words over a finite alphabet which is usually called the theory of "e;unavoidable"e; regularities. The unavoidable regularities ofsufficiently large words over a finite alpha- bet are very important in the study of finiteness conditions for semigroups. This problem consists in considering conditions which are satisfied by a fi- nite semigroup and are such as to assure that a semigroup satisfying them is finite. The most natural requirement is that the semigroup is finitely gener- ated. Ifone supposes that the semigroup is also periodic the study offiniteness conditions for these semigroups (or groups) is called the Burnside problem for semigroups (or groups). There exists an important relationship with the theory of finite automata because, as is well known, a language L over a fi- nite alphabet is regular (that is, recognizable by a finite automaton) if and only if its syntactic monoid S(L) is finite. Hence, in principle, any finite- ness condition for semigroups can be translated into a regularity condition for languages. The study of finiteness conditions for periodic languages (Le. , such that the syntactic semigroup is periodic) has been called the Burnside problem for languages.