Ring-like structures with two binary operations and no other restrictions are a broad class, one which is too general to study. For this reason, the best-known kinds of non-associative algebras satisfy
identities, or properties, which simplify multiplication somewhat. These include the following ones.
Usual properties Let , and denote arbitrary elements of the algebra over the field . Let powers to positive (non-zero) integer be recursively defined by and either (right powers) or (left powers) depending on authors. •
Unital: there exist an element so that ; in that case we can define . •
Associative: . •
Commutative: . •
Anticommutative: . •
Jacobi identity: or depending on authors, but these are equivalent for anticommutative algebras, and
Lie algebras are anticommutative algebras obeying the Jacobi identity. •
Jordan identity: or depending on authors, but these are equivalent for commutative algebras, and
Jordan algebras are commutative algebras obeying the Jordan identity. •
Alternative: (left alternative) and (right alternative). •
Flexible: . • th power associative with : for all integers so that . • Third power associative: . • Fourth power associative: (compare with
fourth power commutative below). •
Power associative: the subalgebra generated by any element is associative, i.e.,
th power associative for all . • th power commutative with : for all integers so that . • Third power commutative: . • Fourth power commutative: (compare with
fourth power associative above). • Power commutative: the subalgebra generated by any element is commutative, i.e.,
th power commutative for all . •
Nilpotent of index : the product of any elements, in any association, vanishes, but not for some elements: and there exist elements so that for a specific association. •
Nil of index :
power associative and and there exist an element so that .
Relations between properties For of any
characteristic: •
Associative implies
alternative. • Any two out of the three properties
left alternative,
right alternative, and
flexible, imply the third one. • Thus,
alternative implies
flexible. •
Alternative implies
Jordan identity. •
Commutative implies
flexible. •
Anticommutative implies
flexible. •
Alternative implies
power associative. •
Flexible implies
third power associative. •
Second power associative and
second power commutative are always true. •
Third power associative and
third power commutative are equivalent. •
th power associative implies
th power commutative. •
Nil of index 2 implies
anticommutative. •
Nil of index 2 implies
Jordan identity. •
Nilpotent of index 3 implies
Jacobi identity. •
Nilpotent of index implies
nil of index with . •
Unital and
nil of index are incompatible. If or : •
Jordan identity and
commutative together imply
power associative. If : •
Right alternative implies
power associative. • Similarly,
left alternative implies
power associative. •
Unital and
Jordan identity together imply
flexible. •
Jordan identity and
flexible together imply
power associative. •
Commutative and
anticommutative together imply
nilpotent of index 2. •
Anticommutative implies
nil of index 2. •
Unital and
anticommutative are incompatible. If : •
Unital and
Jacobi identity are incompatible. If {{math|char(
K) ∉ {2,3,5}}}: •
Commutative and (one of the two identities defining
fourth power associative) together imply
power associative. If : •
Third power associative and (one of the two identities defining
fourth power associative) together imply
power associative. If : •
Commutative and
anticommutative are equivalent.
Associator The
associator on
A is the
K-
multilinear map [\cdot,\cdot,\cdot] : A \times A \times A \to A given by : . It measures the degree of nonassociativity of A, and can be used to conveniently express some possible identities satisfied by
A. Let , and denote arbitrary elements of the algebra. • Associative: . • Alternative: (left alternative) and (right alternative). • It implies that permuting any two terms changes the sign: ; the converse holds only if . • Flexible: . • It implies that permuting the extremal terms changes the sign: ; the converse holds only if . • Jordan identity: or depending on authors. • Third power associative: . The
nucleus is the set of elements that associate with all others: that is, the in
A such that : {{math|[
n,
A,
A] [
A,
n,
A] [
A,
A,
n] {0}}. The nucleus is an associative subring of
A.
Center The
center of
A is the set of elements that commute and associate with everything in
A, that is the intersection of : C(A) = \{ n \in A \ | \ nr=rn \, \forall r \in A \, \} with the nucleus. It turns out that for elements of
C(A) it is enough that two of the sets ([n,A,A], [A,n,A] , [A,A,n]) are \{0\} for the third to also be the zero set. == Examples ==