Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 26, 2026

Trivial semigroup

In mathematics, a trivial semigroup is a semigroup for which the cardinality of the underlying set is one. The number of distinct nonisomorphic semigroups with one element is one. If S = { a } is a semigroup with one element, then the Cayley table of S is

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In mathematics, a trivial semigroup (a semigroup with one element) is a semigroup for which the cardinality of the underlying set is one. The number of distinct nonisomorphic semigroups with one element is one. If S = { a } is a semigroup with one element, then the Cayley table of S is

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The only element in S is the zero element 0 of S and is also the identity element 1 of S.1 However not all semigroup theorists consider the unique element in a semigroup with one element as the zero element of the semigroup. They define zero elements only in semigroups having at least two elements.23

In spite of its extreme triviality, the semigroup with one element is important in many situations. It is the starting point for understanding the structure of semigroups. It serves as a counterexample in illuminating many situations. For example, the semigroup with one element is the only semigroup in which 0 = 1, that is, the zero element and the identity element are equal. Further, if S is a semigroup with one element, the semigroup obtained by adjoining an identity element to S is isomorphic to the semigroup obtained by adjoining a zero element to S.

The semigroup with one element is also a group.

In the language of category theory, any semigroup with one element is a terminal object in the category of semigroups.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. A. H. Clifford; G. B. Preston (1964). The Algebraic Theory of Semigroups. Vol. I (2nd ed.). American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-0272-4. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  2. P. A. Grillet (1995). Semigroups. CRC Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-8247-9662-4.
  3. Howie, J. M. (1976). An Introduction to Semigroup Theory. LMS Monographs. Vol. 7. Academic Press. pp. 2–3.