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In this article, we study the Bergman property for semigroups and the associated notions of cofinality and strong cofinality. A large part of the paper is devoted to determining when the Bergman property, and the values of the cofinality and strong cofinality, can be passed from semigroups to subsemigroups and vice versa.Numerous examples, including many important semigroups from the literature, are given throughout the paper. For example, it is shown that the semigroup of all mappings on an infinite set has the Bergman property but that its finitary power semigroup does not; the symmetric inverse semigroup on an infinite set and its finitary power semigroup have the Bergman property; the Baer-Levi semigroup does not have the Bergman property.
This paper proves that any monoid presented by a confluent context-free monadic rewriting system is word-hyperbolic. This result then applied to answer a question asked by Duncan & Gilman by exhibiting an example of a word-hyperbolic monoid that does not admit a word-hyperbolic structure with uniqueness (that is, in which the language of representatives maps bijectively onto the monoid). ment through the FCT (Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia) under the project PEst-C/MAT/UI0144/2011 and through an FCT Ciência 2008 fellowship.
We construct the inverse partition semigroup[Formula: see text], isomorphic to the dual symmetric inverse monoid[Formula: see text], introduced in [6]. We give a convenient geometric illustration for elements of [Formula: see text]. We describe all maximal subsemigroups of [Formula: see text] and find a generating set for [Formula: see text] when X is finite. We prove that all the automorphisms of [Formula: see text] are inner. We show how to embed the symmetric inverse semigroup into the inverse partition one. For finite sets X, we establish that, up to equivalence, there is a unique faithful effective transitive representation of [Formula: see text], namely to [Formula: see text]. Finally, we construct an interesting [Formula: see text]-cross-section of [Formula: see text], which is reminiscent of [Formula: see text], the [Formula: see text]-cross-section of [Formula: see text], constructed in [4].
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