In
group theory, an antihomomorphism is a map between two groups that reverses the order of multiplication. So if is a group antihomomorphism, :
φ(
xy) =
φ(
y)
φ(
x) for all
x,
y in
X. The map that sends
x to
x−1 is an example of a group antiautomorphism. Another important example is the
transpose operation in
linear algebra, which takes
row vectors to
column vectors. Any vector-matrix equation may be transposed to an equivalent equation where the order of the factors is reversed. With matrices, an example of an antiautomorphism is given by the transpose map. Since inversion and transposing both give antiautomorphisms, their composition is an automorphism. This involution is often called the contragredient map, and it provides an example of an outer automorphism of the
general linear group , where
F is a field, except when and , or and (i.e., for the groups , , and ). In
ring theory, an antihomomorphism is a map between two rings that preserves addition, but reverses the order of multiplication. So is a ring antihomomorphism if and only if: :
φ(1) = 1 :
φ(
x +
y) =
φ(
x) +
φ(
y) :
φ(
xy) =
φ(
y)
φ(
x) for all
x,
y in
X. For
algebras over a field K,
φ must be a
K-
linear map of the underlying
vector space. If the underlying field has an involution, one can instead ask
φ to be
conjugate-linear, as in conjugate transpose, below.
Involutions It is frequently the case that antiautomorphisms are
involutions, i.e. the square of the antiautomorphism is the
identity map; these are also called
s. For example, in any group the map that sends
x to its
inverse x−1 is an involutive antiautomorphism. A ring with an involutive antiautomorphism is called a
*-ring, and
these form an important class of examples. ==Properties==