In
mathematics, an
iterated binary operation is an extension of a
binary operation on a set
S to a
function on finite
sequences of elements of
S through repeated application. Common examples include the extension of the
addition operation to the
summation operation, and the extension of the
multiplication operation to the
product operation. Other operations, e.g., the set theoretic operations
union and
intersection, are also often iterated, but the iterations are not given separate names. In print, summation and product are represented by special symbols; but other iterated operators often are denoted by larger variants of the symbol for the ordinary binary operator. Thus, the iterations of the four operations mentioned above are denoted
- and , respectively.
In general, there is more than one way to extend a binary operation to operate on finite seqences, depending on whether the operator is associative, and whether the operator has identity elements.
Denote by , with j >= 0 and k >= j, the finite sequence of length of elements of S, with members (ai), for . Note that if k = j, the sequence is empty.
For f : S × S, define a new function on finite nonempty sequences of elements of S, where
begin{cases}
a_0, &k=1
f(F_l(mathbf{a}_{0,k-1}), a_k), &k>1
end{cases}.
Similarly, define
begin{cases}
a_0, &k=1
f(a_0, F_r(mathbf{a}_{1,k})), &k>1
end{cases}.
If f is associative, Fl = Fr.
If f has a unique left identity e, the definition of Fl can be modified to operate on empty sequences by defining the value of Fl on an empty sequence to be e (the previous base case on sequences of length 1 becomes redundant). Similarly, Fr can be modified to operate on empty sequences if f has a unique right identity.
If S also is equipped with a metric or more generally with any topology, whence the concept of a limit of a sequence is defined in S, then an infinite iteration on a countable sequence in S is defined exactly when the corresponding sequence of finite iterations converges to a unique limit. Thus, e.g., if a_1, a_2, a_3,... is a countable sequence of real numbers, then the infinite product is defined and equal to if and only if that limit exists.
Non-associative binary operation
The general, non-associative binary operation is given by a
magma. The act of iterating on a non-associative binary operation may be represented as a
binary tree.
See also
External links