The
subdirect representation theorem of universal algebra states that every algebra is subdirectly representable by its subdirectly irreducible
quotients. An equivalent definition of "subdirect irreducible" therefore is any algebra
A that is not subdirectly representable by those of its quotients not isomorphic to
A. (This is not quite the same thing as "by its proper quotients" because a proper quotient of
A may be isomorphic to
A, for example the quotient of the semilattice (
Z, ) obtained by identifying just the two elements 3 and 4.) An immediate
corollary is that any
variety, as a class closed under
homomorphisms,
subalgebras, and
direct products, is determined by its subdirectly irreducible members, since every algebra
A in the variety can be constructed as a subalgebra of a suitable direct product of the subdirectly irreducible quotients of
A, all of which belong to the variety because
A does. For this reason one often studies not the variety itself but just its subdirect irreducibles. An algebra
A is subdirectly irreducible if and only if it contains two elements that are identified by every proper quotient, equivalently, if and only if its lattice
Con A of
congruences has a least nonidentity element. That is, any subdirect irreducible must contain a specific pair of elements witnessing its irreducibility in this way. Given such a witness (
a,
b) to subdirect irreducibility we say that the subdirect irreducible is (
a,
b)-irreducible. Given any class
C of similar algebras, '''Jónsson's lemma'
(due to Bjarni Jónsson) states that if the variety HSP(C
) generated by C
is congruence-distributive, its subdirect irreducibles are in HSPU(C
), that is, they are quotients of subalgebras of ultraproducts of members of C
. (If C'' is a finite set of finite algebras, the ultraproduct operation is redundant.) ==Applications==