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Alternativity

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by John Baez (talk | contribs) at 09:55, 18 October 2025 (Examples: It is not true that any Cayley-Dickson algebra is alternative, so I corrected this and added mention of "octonion algebras", which are more general than the octonions.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In abstract algebra, alternativity is a property of a binary operation. A magma G is said to be left alternative if for all and right alternative if for all . A magma that is both left and right alternative is said to be alternative.[1]

Any associative magma (that is, a semigroup) is alternative. More generally, a magma in which every pair of elements generates an associative submagma must be alternative. The converse, however, is not true, in contrast to the situation in alternative algebras.

Examples

Examples of algebraic structures with an alternative multiplication include:

  • Any semigroup is associative and therefore alternative.
  • Moufang loops are alternative and flexible but generally not associative. See Moufang loop § Examples for more examples.
  • Octonion multiplication is alternative and flexible. The same is more generally true for any octonion algebra.
  • Applying the Cayley-Dickson construction once to a commutative ring with a trivial involution gives a commutative associative algebra. Applying it twice gives an associative algebra. Applying it three times gives an alternative algebra. And applying it four times gives an algebra that is typically not alternative (thought it is in characteristic two).

See also

References

  1. ^ Phillips, J. D.; Stanovský, David (2010), "Automated theorem proving in quasigroup and loop theory" (PDF), AI Communications, 23 (2–3): 267–283, doi:10.3233/AIC-2010-0460, MR 2647941, Zbl 1204.68181.