On the Word Problem for Special Monoids
Abstract
A monoid is called special if it admits a presentation in which all defining relations are of the form . Every group is special, but not every monoid is special. In this article, we describe the language-theoretic properties of the word problem, in the sense of Duncan & Gilman, for special monoids in terms of their group of units. We prove that a special monoid has context-free word problem if and only if its group of units is virtually free, giving a full generalisation of the Muller-Schupp theorem. This fully answers, for the class of special monoids, a question posed by Duncan & Gilman in 2004. We describe the congruence classes of words in a special monoid, and prove that these have the same language-theoretic properties as the word problem. This answers a question first posed by Zhang in 1992. As a corollary, we prove that it is decidable (in polynomial time) whether a special one-relation monoid has context-free word problem. This completely answers another question from 1992, also posed by Zhang.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2011.09466,
title = {On the Word Problem for Special Monoids},
author = {Carl-Fredrik Nyberg-Brodda},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.09466},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
29 pages, 79 references. Significant revision from previous version