Interior algebra Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In abstract algebra, an interior algebra is an algebraic structure of the signature
- <A, ·, +, ', 0, 1, I>
- <A, ·, +, ', 0, 1>
- xI ≤ x
- xII = xI
- (xy)I = xIyI
- 1I = 1
The dual of the interior operator is the closure operator C defined by xC = x ' I '. By the principle of duality, the closure operator satisfies the identities:
- xC ≥ x
- xCC = xC
- (x + y)C = xC + yC
- 0C = 0
Elements of an interior algebra satisfying the condition xI = x are called open. The complements of open elements are called closed and are characterized by the condition xC = x. An interior of an element is always open and the closure of an element is always closed. Interiors of closed elements are called regular open and closures of open elements are called regular closed. Elements which are both open and closed are called clopen. 0 and 1 are clopen.
Since interior algebras are algebraic structures we can speak of interior algebra homomorphisms. Given two interior algebras A and B, a map f : A → B is an interior algebra homomorphism if and only if it is a homomorphism between the underlying Boolean algebras of A and B and in addition preserves interiors (and hence equivalently, preserves closures) i.e.
Another important, and more general, class of morphisms between interior algebras are the topomorphisms. A map f : A → B is a topomorphism if and only if it is a homomorphism between the underlying Boolean algebras of A and B and in addition preserves open elements (and hence equivalently, preserves closed elements) i.e.
Given a topological space X = <X, T> one can from the power set Boolean algebra of X
Every complete atomic interior algebra is isomorphic to an interior algebra of the form A(X) for some topological space X. Moreover every interior algebra can be embedded in such an interior algebra giving a representation of an interior algebra as a topological field of sets. The properties of the structure A(X) are the very motivation for the definition of interior algebras. Because of this intimate connection with topology, interior algebras have also been called topo-Boolean algebras or topological Boolean algebras.
Given a theory (set of formal sentences) M in the modal logic S4, we can form its Lindenbaum-Tarski algebra
The open elements of L(M) correspond to sentences that are only true if they are necessarily true while the closed elements corresond to those that are only false if they are necessarily false.
Because of their relationship to the modal logic S4, interior algebras have also been called S4 algebras or Lewis algebras (after the logician C. I. Lewis who classified the modal logics S1 - S5).
Since interior algebras are Boolean algebras with operators they can be represented by fields of sets on appropriate relational structures. In particular since they are modal algebras they can be represented as fields of sets on a set with a single binary relation, called a modal frame in this context. The modal frames corresponding to interior algebras are precisely the preordered sets. Preordered sets (also called S4-frames) provide the possible world semantics of the modal logic S4 and the connection between interior algebras and preorders is deeply related to their connection with modal logic.
Given a preordered set X = <X, « > we can construct an interior algebra
This construction and representation theorem is a special case of the more general result for modal algebras and modal frames. The case for interior algebras is particularly interesting because of their connection to topology. The construction provides the preordered set X with a topology (the Alexandrov topology) producing a topological space T(X) with open sets given by
Any Monadic Boolean algebra can be considered to be an interior algebra where the interior operator is the universal quantifier and the closure operator is the existential quantifier. The Monadic Boolean algebras are then precisely the variety of interior algebras satisfying the identity xIC = xI. In other words they are precisely the interior algebras in which every open element is closed or equivalently, in which every closed element is open. Moreover, such interior algebras are precisely the semisimple interior algebras. They are also the interior algebras corresponding to the modal logic S5 and in this context have also been called S5 algebras.
In the relationship between preordered sets and interior algebras they correspond to the case where the preorder is an equivalence relation, reflecting the fact that such preordered sets provide the possible world semantics for S5. This also reflects the relationship between the monadic logic of quantification (for which monadic Boolean algebras provide an algebraic description) and S5 where the modal operators □ (necessarily) and ◊ (possibly) can be interpreted in the possible world semantics using monadic universal and existential quantification respectively.
The open elements of an interior algebra form a Heyting algebra and the closed elements form a dual Heyting algebra. The regular open elements and regular closed elements correspond to the pseudo-complemented elements and dual pseudo-complemented elements of these algebras respectively and thus form Boolean algebras which are subalgebras of the underlying Boolean algebra of the interior algebra. The clopen elements correspond to the complemented elements and form a common subalgebra of these Boolean algebras as well as of the interior algebra itself. Every Heyting algebra can be represented as the open elements of an interior algebra.
Heyting algebras play the same role for intuitionistic logic that interior algebras play for the modal logic S4 and Boolean algebras play for propositional logic. The relationship between Heyting algebras and interior algebras reflects the relationship between intuitionistic logic and the modal logic S4 in which one can interpret theories in intuitionistic logic as theories in S4 closed under necessity.
Given an interior algebra A, the closure operator obeys the axioms of a derivative operator and so we can form a derivative algebra D(A) with the same underlying Boolean algebra as A, by defining a derivative operator by xD = xC.
We can thus regard interior algebras as being derivative algebras. In this perspective they are precisely the variety of derivative algebras satisfying the identity xD ≥ x.
Given a derivative algebra V with derivative operator D, we can form an interior algebra I(A) with the same underlying Boolean algebra as V and interior and closure operators defined by xI = x·x ' D ' and xC = x + xD respectively. Thus every derivative algebra can be regarded as an interior algebra. Moreover given an interior algebra A we have I(D(A)) = A. However we do not necessarily have D(I(V)) = V for every derivative algebra V.
The relationship between interior algebras and derivative algebras reflects the relationship between the modal logic S4 and the modal logic wK4 for which derivative algebrass provide the appropriate algebraic semantics. It also reflects the relationship in topology between interiors and closures and derived sets.Open and closed elements
Morphisms of Interior Algebras
Homomorphisms
Topomorphisms
Every interior algebra homomorphism is a topomorphism but not every topomorphism is an interior algebra homomorphism.Relationships to other areas of mathematics
Topology
and extend it to an interior algebra
where I is the usual topological interior operator defined by
The corresponding closure operator is given by
S I is the largest open subset of S and S C is the smallest closed superset of S in X. The open, closed, regular open, regular closed and clopen elements of the interior algebra A(X) are just the open, closed, regular open, regular closed and clopen subsets of X respectively in the usual topological sense.Modal logic
where ~ is the equivalence relation on sentences in M given by p ~ q if and only if p and q are logically equivalent in M, and M / ~ is the set of equivalence classes under this relation. Then L(M) is an interior algebra. The interior operator in this case corresponds to the modal operator □ (necessarily) while the closure operator corresponds to ◊ (possibly). This construction is a special case of a more general result for modal algebras and modal logic.Preorders
from the power set Boolean algebra of X where the interior operator I is given by
The corresponding closure operator is given by
S I is the set of all worlds inaccessible from worlds outside S, and S C is the set of all worlds accessible from some world in S. Every interior algebra can be embedded in an interior algebra of the form B(X) for some preordered set X giving the above mentioned representation as a field of sets (a preorder field).
and corresponding closed sets given by
In other words the open sets are the ones whose worlds are inaccessible from outside (the up-sets) and the closed sets are the ones for which every outside world is inaccessible from inside (the down-sets). Moreover B(X) = A(T(X)).Monadic Boolean algebras
Heyting algebras
Derivative algebras
