Even subalgebra Let A be a superalgebra over a commutative ring K. The
submodule A_0, consisting of all even elements, is closed under multiplication and contains the identity of A and therefore forms a
subalgebra of A, naturally called the
even subalgebra. It forms an ordinary
algebra over K. The set of all odd elements A_1 is an A_0-
bimodule whose scalar multiplication is just multiplication in A. The product in A equips A_1 with a
bilinear form :\mu:A_1\otimes_{A_0}A_1 \to A_0 such that :\mu(x\otimes y)\cdot z = x\cdot\mu(y\otimes z) for all x, y, and z in A_1. This follows from the associativity of the product in A.
Grade involution There is a canonical
involutive automorphism on any superalgebra called the
grade involution. It is given on homogeneous elements by :\hat x = (-1)^x and on arbitrary elements by :\hat x = x_0 - x_1 where x_i are the homogeneous parts of x. If A has no
2-torsion (in particular, if 2 is invertible) then the grade involution can be used to distinguish the even and odd parts of A: :A_i = \{x \in A : \hat x = (-1)^i x\}.
Supercommutativity The
supercommutator on A is the binary operator given by :[x,y] = xy - (-1)^yx on homogeneous elements, extended to all of A by linearity. Elements x and y of A are said to
supercommute if [x,y] = 0. The
supercenter of A is the set of all elements of A which supercommute with all elements of A: :\mathrm{Z}(A) = \{a\in A : [a,x]=0 \text{ for all } x\in A\}. The supercenter of A is, in general, different than the
center of A as an ungraded algebra. A commutative superalgebra is one whose supercenter is all of A.
Super tensor product The graded
tensor product of two superalgebras A and B may be regarded as a superalgebra A\otimes B with a multiplication rule determined by: :(a_1\otimes b_1)(a_2\otimes b_2) = (-1)^(a_1a_2\otimes b_1b_2). If either A or B is purely even, this is equivalent to the ordinary ungraded tensor product (except that the result is graded). However, in general, the super tensor product is distinct from the tensor product of A and B regarded as ordinary, ungraded algebras. ==Generalizations and categorical definition==