1. Introduction
The integral complete
l-groupoids (=
-groupoids) are multiplicative lattices in which several properties of ideals of the unital rings can be abstractized (see [
1]).
Let
A be an algebra in a congruence-modular variety
. Then, the complete lattice
of the congruences of
A is endowed with a binary operation
, named commutator operation (see [
2]). The semidegenerate varieties were introduced by Kollar in [
3] by the property that their nontrivial algebras have one-element subalgebras. An important remark is that for any algebra
A in a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety
, the lattice
becomes an
-groupoid. In this way, the
-groupoids offer a setting for an abstract theory for lattices of congruences of algebras in a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety.
The variety
can be organized as a category (denoted also by
) in an usual way: the objects are the algebras of
and the morphisms are the homomorphisms between these algebras. In the case of studying the functorial properties of important constructions, it is preferable not to work with the entire class of homomorphisms but with some of its subclasses. For example, the admissible morphisms of
(defined in [
4]) are necessary in the study of the functoriality of reticulation.
Naturally, the challenge lies in finding an abstract version of the morphisms of and their properties. With each morphism of , we canonically associate the function , which maps any congruence of A to its inverse image . The assignment is the vehicle by which we determine the entities that abstract morphisms. In general, is not a morphism of -groupoids; it preserves the arbitrary joins and the top congruences, but not the commutator operation. This observation leads to the notion of semimorphism of -groupoids; they will preserve the arbitrary joins and the top elements but not the multiplication.
In this paper, we will study some important classes of semimorphisms of -groupoids. First of all, we will define and characterize the admissible semimorphisms as an abstraction of admissible morphisms in a semidegenerate congruence- modular variety . Remarkable properties of some classes of morphisms in will be highlighted, which can be extended to properties of the admissible semimorphisms of -groupoids. The most important results of this paper will be obtained for the admissible semimorphisms of neo-commutative -groupoids. The reason for this choice is that in the proofs of most of the results, Lemma 4 is used, which describes the radical of an element of a neo-commutative element -groupoid.
We will now briefly present the structure of this paper.
Section 2 contains a collection of notions and elementary facts on integral complete
l-groupoids (the material is contained in [
1,
5,
6,
7]).
Section 3 recalls some definitions and results from universal algebra: the commutator operation on congruences of algebras in congruence-modular varieties [
2], semidegenerate varieties [
3,
8], and neo-commutative algebras. For the notions of universal algebra that are not mentioned in this paper, we refer the reader to the monograph [
9].
In
Section 4, we find the definition of the admissible morphisms of
-groupoids and more of their characterizations. The category
of neo-commutative
-groupoids and their admissible coherent semimorphisms is introduced as the framework for most of the results of this paper. Theorem 2 allows for the construction of the covariant functor
from
to the category
of coherent frames. The functor
will be used to transfer some properties of the morphisms of
to the morphisms of
and vice versa. The transfer properties associated with this functor will be the main tool for most of the proofs presented in this paper.
Section 5 deals with the minimal
m-prime elements of a semiprime neo-commutative
-groupoid
A. We first characterize the minimal
m-prime elements of
A, and then, we study two topologies on the set
of these elements. Consequently, we obtain two topological spaces:
, endowed with a Zariski-style topology, and
, endowed with a flat topology.
Following some ideas of [
10], in
Section 6, we study the going-down property for the category
. We prove that the functor
preserves the going-down property, and then we obtain a characterization theorem for the admissible semimorphisms of
fulfilling the going-down property. We use the going-down property to characterize the neo-commutative
-groupoids of Krull dimension 0 and Krull dimension at most 1. In
Section 7, we define the Baer and weak-Baer morphisms of the category
and we prove two theorems for their characterization.
Section 8 deals with three classes of morphisms of
: quasi
r-morphisms, quasi
-morphisms, and quasi morphisms. They generalize three classes of ring extensions studied in [
11]: quasi
r-extensions, quasi
-extensions, and quasi rigid extensions. We prove that the functor
preserves these three types of morphisms, and we obtain the generalizations of some results of [
11]. Among them, we mention the algebro-topological characterization characterizations of the quasi
r-morphisms and the quasi
-morphisms of
.
2. Preliminaries on Integral Complete l-Groupoids
This section contains some notions and basic properties of the integral complete l-groupoids (see ref. [
1]).
According to ref. [
1] (p.172), an algebraic structure
is a
complete l-groupoid (=
-groupoid) if
is a complete lattice and · is a multiplication satisfying the following infinite distributive law: for all
and
,
and
. The
-groupoid
will be shortly denoted by
A and we shall write
instead of
.
A is said to be an
integral - groupoid (=
-
groupoid) if
for any
. We shall denote by
the set of compact elements of
A.
A is said to be algebraic if any
has the form
for some subset
X of
.
Let be two -groupoids. A map is said to be a morphism of -groupoids if it preserves the arbitrary joins, the multiplication, and the top elements.
Lemma 1 ([
1]).
Let A be an integral -groupoid and . Then, the following holds:- (1)
implies and ;
- (2)
.
By Lemma 1 (2), the
-groupoids are complete multiplicative lattices in the sense of Definition 2.1 of [
5]. They include some important classes of complete multiplicative lattices: quantales [
12,
13], frames [
14,
15], etc. A quantale is an
-groupoid in which the multiplication is associative, and a frame is a quantale in which the multiplication coincides with the meet operation.
As usual, we define the left and the right
residuation operations on each
-groupoid
A:
and
. Thus,
A becomes a residuated lattice (cf. [
1], p. 327). The basic arithmetical properties of a residuated lattice can be found in [
16]. The two
annihilator operations on
A are defined by
and .
Let us fix an algebraic -groupoid A such that .
Following Definition 6.1 of [
5], for any element
, the following sequence
is defined by an induction on
n:
By using Lemma 1 (1), it follows that the sequence is monotone decreasing.
Lemma 2 ([
5]).
If and n is a natural number, then the following inequality holds: An element of an -groupoid A is m-prime if for all , implies or . If A is an algebraic -groupoid, then is m-prime if and only if for all , implies or . The set of m-prime elements of A is called the m-prime spectrum of A. We denote by the set of minimal m-prime elements of A. For each , there exists such that .
Following [
1,
5], the
radical of an element
is defined by
; if
, then
a is a radical element. We shall denote by
the set of radical elements of
A.
A is said to be
semiprime if
.
According to Section 3 of [
5], the function
is a closure operator on
A. Then,
, for any family
of elements of
A. If
is a family of radical elements, then we denote
. Then,
is a frame (see Example 3.5(a) of [
5]).
Using (
1), we obtain
, for any
and for all natural numbers
n.
For any element a of A, we denote and .
Remark 1 ([
5]).
For all of A and , the following hold:; ; ; ;
; ; ; .
Proposition 1 ([
5]).
Let be two elements of A. Then, the following hold:- (1)
; ;
- (2)
iff iff ;
- (3)
iff iff .
According to Remark 1 and Proposition 1,
is endowed with a topology whose open sets are
. This topological space will be denoted by
. If
A is an algebraic
-groupoid, then the family
is a basis of open sets for this topology. The topology introduced here generalizes the Zariski topology (defined on the prime spectrum
of a commutative ring
R [
17]).
Definition 1. An algebraic -groupoid A is said to be a quasi-commutative groupoid if , and for all compact elements of A, there exists such that and .
Definition 2. A neo-commutative -groupoid is an algebraic -groupoid A such that and is closed under multiplication.
Remark 2. If R is a unital ring, then the following hold:
R is a quasi-commutative ring in the sense of [18] iff is a quasi-commutative -groupoid; R is a neo-commutative ring in the sense of [19] iff is a neo-commutative -groupoid.
Lemma 3. If A is quasi-commutative groupoid, then is a coherent frame.
Proof. By Theorem 4.18 of [
6], the quasi-commutative groupoid
A is a spectral groupoid (in the sense of Definition 4.16 of [
6]); so, the
m-prime spectrum
of
A is a spectral space. Therefore, by Theorem 3.6 of [
5], it follows that
is a compact algebraic frame, closed under finite intersections. Thus,
is a coherent frame.
□
Remark 3. Any neo-commutative -groupoid is a quasi-commutative groupoid. Therefore, according to Lemma 3, if A is a neo-commutative groupoid, then is a coherent frame.
Lemma 4. If A is a neo-commutative -groupoid, then for any , we have
for some integer .
Proof. The equality
for some integer
follows by applying Theorem 7.4(b) of [
5].
□
Let A be a neo-commutative -groupoid. For all , we have and . Then, the family is closed under finite intersections; so, it is a base of the topological space .
We also remark that for all , and ; so, the family is a base for a topology on (named the flat topology or the inverse topology). We shall denote by the m-prime spectrum endowed with the flat topology.
3. Congruences of Algebras in a Semidegenerate Congruence-Modular Variety
Let A be an algebra of a fixed congruence . We denote by the complete lattice of the congruences of A; and are the bottom congruence and the top congruence of . If X is a subset of , then is the congruence of A generated by X; if , then denotes the (principal) congruence generated by . The finitely generated congruences of A are the compact elements of the ; denotes the set of compact congruences of A.
Let be the quotient algebra of A associated with ; we denote by the congruence class of (modulo ). If is the canonical surjective morphism (defined by ), then for each subset X of . Therefore, we obtain the following description of the set of compact congruences of : .
Let us fix a
congruence-modular variety of algebras of signature
. Recall from [
2] (p.31), that the
commutator is the greatest operation
on the congruence lattices
of members
A of
such that for any surjective morphism
of
and for any
, the following axioms are fulfilled:
By (
4), we obtain that for all congruences
of
A, the following equality holds:
Recall from [
2] that the commutator operation is commutative, increasing in each argument and distributive with respect to arbitrary joins. If there is no danger of confusion, then we write
instead of
.
Proposition 2. (see [2], Theorem 8.5) For any congruence-modular variety , the following properties are equivalent: - (1)
, for all ;
- (2)
, for all and .
According to Kollar’s paper [
3], a variety
is said to be
semidegenerate if no nontrivial algebra in
has one-element subalgebras. By Kollar’s Theorem ([
3], p. 266), a variety
is semidegenerate if and only if for any algebra
A in
, the congruence
is compact.
Proposition 3. (see [8], Lemma 5.2(2)) If is a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety, then , for each algebra A in . Remark 4. Let be a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety and A an algebra of . By applying Propositions 2 and 3, it follows that , for any . Then, the structure is an algebraic -groupoid.
Following [
19], a ring
R is
neo-commutative if the product of two finitely generated ideals of
R is a finitely generated ideal. We note that this notion can be generalized to a universal algebra framework: an algebra
A of the semidegenerate congruence-modular variety
is said to be neo-commutative if
is closed under commutator operation.
4. Admissible Semimorphisms of -Groupoids
4.1. Admissible Semimorphisms
Let be a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety and a morphism of . Let us consider the functions and defined by and , for all and .
Lemma 5. The following hold:
- (1)
is the left adjoint of ;
- (2)
preserves the arbitrary joins and preserves the arbitrary meets.
Definition 3. Let be two -groupoids. A map is said to be a semimorphism of -groupoids if it preserves the arbitrary joins. A semimorphism of -groupoids is a morphism of -groupoids if it preserves the multiplication.
Remark 5. According to Lemma 5, if is a morphism of a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety , then is a semimorphism of -groupoids.
Let be a semimorphism of -groupoids. Then, u has a right adjoint defined by , for any . Then, for all , if and only if .
Recall that an algebraic -groupoid is coherent if 1 is compact and is closed to multiplication. The semimorphism of -groupoids is said to be coherent if .
Lemma 6. If is a semimorphism of -groupoids, then the following hold:
- (1)
, for any ;
- (2)
, for any .
The following lemma is well known. For the sake of completeness, we will present its proof.
Lemma 7. Assume that are two algebraic -groupoids and is a surjective semimorphism of -groupoids. If u preserves the compact elements, then .
Proof. By hypothesis, . In order to prove the converse inclusion, let d be a compact element of B. However, u is a surjective map, so one can find an element x of A such that . Since A is an algebraic -groupoid, for a family of compact elements of A. Then, and . Then, there exists a finite subset J of I such that . If , then and . It follows that , so .
□
Theorem 1. If is a semimorphism of -groupoids, then the following are equivalent:
- (1)
For any , implies ;
- (2)
, for all ;
- (3)
, for all ;
- (4)
, for all .
Proof. Let p be an m-prime element of B and . By hypothesis (1), is an m-prime element of A. Therefore, by using the adjointness of u and , we obtain the following equivalences:
iff iff or iff or iff .
Then, , and hence, by using Proposition 1 (3), we obtain .
Assume that . We have to prove that . Let be two elements of A. By using the adjointness property and hypothesis (2), we obtain the following equivalences:
iff iff iff iff iff or iff or .
It follows that is an m-prime element of A.
According to Lemma 3.4 of [
5], we have
for all
. Then,
, so the equivalence of (2) and (3) follows.
Obviously.
□
Definition 4. A semimorphism of -groupoids is said to be admissible if it fulfills the equivalent properties of 1.
Recall from [
20] that a morphism
of a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety
is admissible if
for each
. Then,
is an admissible semimorphism of
-groupoids if and only if
f is an admissible morphism of
.
Corollary 1. If is an admissible semimorphism of -groupoids, then , for any and for any integer .
Proof. We shall prove the desired equality by induction on
n. For
, the equality is obvious. Suppose that the equality holds for the natural number
n and for any
. We need to show that
for any
. Recall from (
1) that
. Therefore, using the induction hypothesis and Theorem 1(3), we obtain
□
Corollary 2. Assume that are two algebraic -groupoids and is a semimorphism of -groupoids. Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
For any , implies ;
- (2)
, for all ;
- (3)
, for all ;
- (4)
, for all .
Proof. By Theorem 1.
Let , so there exist two collections of compact elements of A such that and (because A is an algebraic -groupoid).
Since
u is a semimorphism of
-groupoids and
preserves the arbitrary joins, the following identities hold:
By hypothesis , , for all and , and hence, . Therefore, by once again using Theorem 1, it follows that for any , implies .
□
In general, a semimorphism of
-groupoids does not preserve the top elements (see ref. [
21]).
Lemma 8. If is an admissible morphism of -groupoids and the top elements of are compact, then .
Proof. Assume by absurdum that , so for some . Therefore, using Lemma 6 (1) and the hypothesis, we obtain the contradiction . It follows that .
□
Proposition 4. If A is a neo-commutative groupoid, then .
Proof. Firstly, we shall prove that . Assume that ; hence, for some . In order to show that x is a compact element of the frame , consider a set such that , and hence, . By Lemma 4, there exists an integer such that . But (because A is neo-commutative), so for some finite subset J of I. Then, , hence . The map is a surjective morphism of -groupoids (it preserves the arbitrary joins, the finite meets, and the top elements). We have proven that preserves the compacts elements; therefore, using Lemma 7, we obtain .
□
4.2. The Main Functorial Construction
Let us consider the following categories:
- -
: The category of algebraic -groupoids and the usual morphisms of -groupoids;
- -
: The category of algebraic -groupoids and the admissible semimorphisms of -groupoids;
- -
: The category of neo-commutative -groupoids and their coherent morphisms;
- -
: The category of neo-commutative -groupoids and their admissible coherent semimorphisms.
Let be a morphism of . For any , we set . Then, we obtain a map .
Theorem 2. If is a morphism of the category , then the following hold:
- (1)
The following diagram is commutative:
- (2)
is the unique frame morphism for which the previous diagram is commutative;
Proof. Let a be an element of A. We have to prove that . By the definition of the map , we have , so we need to show that .
From , we obtain the inequality (because and u are isotone maps). For proving the converse inequality , it suffices to check that . Let q be an m-prime element of B such that ; hence, (by the adjointness property). The semimorphism u is supposed to be admissible, so ; therefore, . A new application of the adjointness property gives . It follows that , and so, the equality is verified. Thus, the diagram is commutative.
Now, we shall prove that
is a frame morphism. Let
be a family of radical elements of the frame
. By using the commutativity of the diagram and the fact that
u preserves the arbitrary joins, we obtain
Then,
preserves the arbitrary joins. Let
be two elements of
, so
for some elements
of
A. By hypothesis, the semimorphism
u is admissible. Therefore, by using the commutativity of the diagram and Theorem 1, the following equalities hold:
Then, preserves the finite meets. By hypothesis, u is an admissible semimorphism of -groupoids. By Lemma 8, we obtain ; hence, . Thus, is a frame morphism. The unicity of follows from the commutativity of the diagram.
Let a be a compact element of the frame . By hypothesis, A is neo-commutative; hence, by applying Proposition 4, there exists a compact element c of A such that . In accordance with the commutativity of the diagram, we have . We observe that u and preserve the compact elements (by the hypothesis of and Proposition 1); therefore, is a compact element of . Therefore, we conclude that is a coherent frame morphism.
□
If are two morphisms of the category , then using Theorem 2, we obtain . Thus, the assignments and define a covariant functor .
Proposition 5. Let be a morphism of . If , then .
Proof. For proving , it suffices to check that . Assume that c is a compact element of A such that .
According to the hypothesis, A is a neo-commutative -groupoid; hence, by using Lemma 4, one can find an integer such that , and hence, (by the adjointness property). Then, we obtain . According to Corollary 1, we have , so . A new application of the adjointness property gives . It follows that .
□
By Proposition 5, for any morphism of , we obtain a map .
Corollary 3. For any morphism of , we have .
Proof. We need to show that is the right adjoint of the frame morphism . By virtue of the adjointness property, for all and , the following equivalences hold:
iff iff iff .
Therefore, is the right adjoint of .
□
Assume that is a morphism of . According to the definition of an admissible semimorphism, one can consider the map defined by , for any .
Lemma 9. If is a morphism of , then for any , the following hold:
- (1)
;
- (2)
.
Proof. If , then iff iff iff .
Similarly. □
Corollary 4. If is a morphism of , then the map is continuous with respect to each of the Stone–Zariski and the flat topologies.
Proof. Recall that (respectively, ) is a basis for the topological space (respectively, ). Let c be a compact element of A. Then, is a compact element of B (by Proposition 4); so, belongs to the basis of . By virtue of Lemma 9 (1), belongs to the basis of , and hence, is continuous. The fact that is continuous follows in a similar way.
□
5. Minimal m-Prime Spectrum
Let us consider an
- groupoid
A such that
. We denote by
the set of minimal
m-prime elements of
A. For each
, there exists
such that
.
is called
the minimal m-prime spectrum of
A. In
Section 2, we observed that the
m-prime spectrum
of
A coincides with the prime spectrum
of the frame
; therefore,
.
If M is an algebra of a semidegenerate congruence-modular variety , then we denote by the minimal m-prime spectrum of the -groupoid . will be called the minimal m-prime spectrum of the algebra M.
Recall from [
1] that the residuation operations
and
fulfill the following “residuation properties”: for all
,
iff
and
iff
. Particularly,
iff
and
iff
.
Lemma 10 ([
6]).
If A is semiprime, then for all , the following equivalence holds: if and only if . Corollary 5 ([
6]).
If A is semiprime, then for any . By virtue of Corollary 5, for any element a of a semiprime -groupoid A, we denote .
Lemma 11. If A is semiprime, then .
Proof. Let x be an arbitrary element of A. Since A is semiprime, the following equivalences hold: iff iff iff iff iff iff . Therefore, we conclude that .
□
Let us denote by → the residuation operation of the frame . Then, for all , we have if and only if .
Lemma 12. Assume that . Then, the following hold:
- (1)
;
- (2)
;
- (3)
If A is semiprime, then ;
- (4)
For any , .
Proof. We shall prove only the equality . In order to show that , assume that x is an element of A such that ; hence, . Then, and , so . Thus, ; therefore, .
In order to establish the converse inequality , assume that and . Then, , and hence, we obtain . It follows that ; hence, . We conclude that , so .
We apply for .
By , we take into account that .
We prove only the equality . It suffices to prove that for any , if and only if . Assume that , so . The converse implication follows immediately.
□
Lemma 13. Let L be a coherent frame and . Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
;
- (2)
For any , implies .
Now, we will use the previous lemma and the covariant functor to obtain a characterization of the minimal m-prime elements in a semiprime neo-commutative groupoid.
Theorem 3. Let A be a semiprime neo-commutative groupoid and . Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
;
- (2)
;
- (3)
For any , implies ;
- (4)
For any , implies .
Proof. By .
By Lemma 13 applied to the coherent frame .
Let c be a compact element of A such that . Thus, (by Proposition 4) and . According to hypothesis , we obtain . By Lemma 12 (3), we obtain . But implies ; hence, .
Let x be a compact element such that . By Proposition 4, there exists such that , so . In accordance with hypothesis , we have . According to Lemmas 11 and 12, we have , and so, .
□
For the rest of this section, we will assume that A is a semiprime neo-commutative -groupoid.
By restricting the topologies of and to , we obtain two topological spaces:
, having as a basis;
, having as a basis.
Lemma 14. (1);
- (2)
.
Proof. Firstly, we observe that . We know that is a basis of and is a basis of . Since , for each (cf. Proposition 1(1)) and (cf. Proposition 4), it follows that the two bases and coincide.
Similarly. □
Corollary 6.
(1);
- (2)
.
Corollary 7. (1) is a zero-dimensional Hausdorff space;
- (2)
is a compact -space.
Proof. By hypothesis,
A is a neo-commutative
-groupoid; hence, using Lemma 3, it follows that
is a coherent frame. Therefore, one can apply Lemma 3.11 and Proposition 3.12 of [
22] to the coherent frame
, and find that
is a zero-dimensional Hausdorff space. By virtue of the equality
of Corollary 6 (1), we obtain that
is a zero-dimensional Hausdorff space.
By Lemma 4.1 of [
22],
is a compact
-space. Due to the equality of Corollary 6(2), it follows that
is a compact
-space.
□
Lemma 15. For all compact elements of A, if and only if .
Proof. Since A is semiprime, the following equivalences hold:
iff iff iff iff .
□
Lemma 16. Let L be a coherent frame. Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
is a compact space;
- (2)
;
- (3)
For any , there exists such that and .
Proof. See Theorem 4.5 of [
22]. □
Lemma 17. The following properties are equivalent:
- (1)
For any , there exists ) such that and ;
- (2)
For any , there exists such that and .
Proof. Assume that x is a compact element of the frame , so for some compact element c of A (cf. Proposition 4). Then, there exists a compact element d of A such that and . By a new application of Proposition 4, is a compact element of the frame . Using Lemmas 11 and 12, we obtain and . According to Lemma 15, implies . Also, implies .
Let c be a compact element of A; hence, is a compact element of the frame . By hypothesis , there exists such that and . Using Proposition 4, for some compact element d of A. Then, (by Lemma 15) and .
□
Theorem 4. The following properties are equivalent:
- (1)
is a compact space;
- (2)
;
- (3)
For any , there exists such that and .
Proof. In accordance with Lemma 16 (the equivalence of and applied to the coherent frame ) and Corollary 6, the following properties are equivalent:
is a compact space;
is a compact space;
;
.
By virtue of Lemma 16 (the equivalence of and applied to the coherent frame ) and Lemma 17, the following properties are equivalent:
;
;
For any there exists such that and ;
For any , there exists ) such that and .
□
Definition 5. A morphism of is minimalisant if for any .
Proposition 6. Let be a morphism of . Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
is minimalisant;
- (2)
The frame morphism is minimalisant.
Proof. Recall that and . According to Corollary 3, for any . Then, the following properties are equivalent:
for each , ;
for each , .
□
7. Baer and Weak-Baer Morphisms
Let be a morphism of a congruence modular variety . We say that f is a Baer morphism (respectively, a weak-Baer morphism) of if for all (respectively, ), implies . We note that the previous two notions are universal algebra generalizations of the Baer ring morphisms and the weak-Baer ring morphisms.
The previous discussion leads to the following definition.
Definition 7. Assume that is a semimorphism of -groupoids:
- (1)
We say that u is a Baer semimorphism (of -groupoids) if for all , implies .
- (2)
We say that u is a weak-Baer semimorphism (of -groupoids) if for all , implies .
We observe that for any morphism of , the following equivalences hold:
•f is a Baer morphism of if and only if is a Baer semimorphism of -groupoids;
•f is a weak-Baer morphism of if and only if is a weak-Baer semimorphism of -groupoids.
The Baer quantale morphisms and the weak-Baer quantale morphisms (defined in [
24]) are particular cases of the notions introduced in Definition 7.
Lemma 28. Let be two coherent frames and be a coherent frame morphism. Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
u is a Baer frame morphism;
- (2)
For any , implies ;
- (3)
For all , implies ;
- (4)
For any , .
Proof. We apply Proposition 5.1 of [
24] to the coherent frame morphism
u. □
Throughout the rest of this section, we will work with semiprime -groupoids.
The following theorem emphasizes the behaviour of the covariant functor with respect to the Baer and weak-Baer morphisms.
Theorem 8. Let be a morphism of . Then, the following hold:
- (1)
u is a weak-Baer morphism of if and only if is weak-Baer frame morphism;
- (2)
u is a Baer morphism of if and only if is Baer frame morphism.
Proof. Assume that
u is a weak-Baer morphism of
. We have to prove that
is a weak-Baer frame morphism. Let
be two compact elements of the coherent frame
such that
. Applying Proposition 4, one can find two compact elements
of
A such that
and
. By Lemmas 11 and 12, we obtain
Using the hypothesis that
u is a weak-Baer morphism of
, we obtain
. According to Theorem 2 and Lemmas 11 and 12, the following equalities hold:
In a similar way, we obtain , and hence, , so is a weak-Baer frame morphism.
Conversely, suppose that and . Therefore, by applying Lemmas 11 and 12, we obtain . But , so we obtain (because is assumed to be a weak-Baer frame morphism).
Using Theorem 2 and Lemmas 11 and 12, the following equalities hold:
Then, u is a weak-Baer morphism of .
Similar to the proof of . □
The following two propositions will characterize the Baer and weak-Baer admissible semimorphisms of -groupoids. The first one will be proven using the transferring properties of the functor , while the proof of the second one will use Theorem 1 and the elementary arithmetic in -groupoids.
Proposition 8. Let be a morphism of the category . Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
u is a Baer morphism of ;
- (2)
For any , implies ;
- (3)
For all , implies ;
- (4)
For any , .
Proof. This proof will use Theorem 8 (2) for transferring the equivalences (1)–(4) of Lemma 28 into the equivalences of properties that characterize the notion of Baer morphism of
. We shall illustrate this method for proving the implication
. Assume that
u is a Baer morphism of
. Recall that
are semiprime. Using Theorem 8, it follows that
is a Baer frame morphism. Applying Lemma 28 to the Baer frame morphism
and
, we obtain
By Lemmas 11 and 12, we have . Therefore, we obtain
. Then, we obtain
(the last equality follows by using Lemma 11). By virtue of Theorem 2 and Lemma 11, we have . Therefore, we conclude that .
□
Proposition 9. Let be a morphism of the category . Then, the following are equivalent:
- (1)
u is a weak-Baer morphism of ;
- (2)
For any , implies ;
- (3)
For all , implies ;
Proof. We shall give a direct proof of this proposition.
Assume that
and
, so
. Therefore, using hypothesis
, we obtain the following equalities:
Then, we obtain the inequality .
Obviously.
We set in .
Recall that the -groupoids are supposed to be semiprime. According to Lemma 10, from , we obtain . By hypothesis , we obtain , hence . Then, by Lemma 10, we have , so we obtain .
By Theorem 1, we have . But and ; hence, . Thus, , so we obtain the converse inequality .
Assume and ; hence, .
Assume that
. Using hypothesis
, we obtain
Therefore, u is a weak-Baer morphism of .
□
Proposition 10. Any minimalisant morphism of the category is a weak-Baer morphism of .
Proof. Assume that the morphism
of the category
is minimalisant. According to Proposition 6, the frame morphism
is minimalisant. By virtue of Proposition 6.5 of [
24] applied to
, it follows that this frame morphism is minimalisant. Therefore, by using Proposition 8 (1), we obtain that
u is a weak-Baer morphism of
. □