Table of Contents

Commutative involutive FL-algebras

Abbreviation: CInFL

Definition

A \emph{commutative involutive FL-algebra} or \emph{commutative involutive residuated lattice} is a structure $\mathbf{A}=\langle A, \vee, \wedge, \cdot, 1, \sim\rangle$ of type $\langle 2, 2, 2, 0, 1\rangle$ such that

$\langle A, \vee, \wedge\rangle$ is a lattice

$\langle A, \cdot, 1\rangle$ is a commutative monoid

$\sim$ is an \emph{involution}: ${\sim}{\sim}x=x$ and

$xy\le z\iff x\le {\sim}(y({\sim}z))$

Definition

A \emph{commutative involutive FL-algebra} or \emph{commutative involutive residuated lattice} is a structure $\mathbf{A}=\langle A, \vee, \wedge, \cdot, 1, \sim\rangle$ of type $\langle 2, 2, 2, 0, 1\rangle$ such that

$\langle A, \vee\rangle$ is a semilattice

$\langle A, \cdot\rangle$ is a commutative semigroup and

$x\le z\iff x\cdot{\sim}y\le{\sim}1$

Morphisms

Let $\mathbf{A}$ and $\mathbf{B}$ be involutive residuated lattices. A morphism from $\mathbf{A}$ to $\mathbf{B}$ is a function $h:A\rightarrow B$ that is a homomorphism: $h(x \vee y)=h(x) \vee h(y)$, $h(x \cdot y)=h(x) \cdot h(y)$, $h({\sim}x)={\sim}h(x)$ and $h(1)=1$.

Examples

Example 1:

Basic results

Properties

Finite members

$\begin{array}{lr}

f(1)= &1\\
f(2)= &1\\
f(3)= &2\\
f(4)= &9\\
f(5)= &21\\

\end{array}$ $\begin{array}{lr}

f(6)= &100\\
f(7)= &276\\
f(8)= &1392\\
f(9)= &\\
f(10)= &\\

\end{array}$

Subclasses

Commutative idempotent involutive FL-algebras subvariety

Superclasses

Cyclic involutive FL-algebras supervariety

References


1) N. Galatos and P. Jipsen, \emph{Residuated frames with applications}, Transactions of the AMS, 365 (2013), 1219-1249