Abstract
A right ideal (left ideal, two-sided ideal) is a non-empty language $L$ over an alphabet $\Sigma$ such that $L=L\Sigma^*$ ($L=\Sigma^*L$, $L=\Sigma^*L\Sigma^*$). Let $k=3$ for right ideals, 4 for left ideals and 5 for two-sided ideals. We show that there exist sequences ($L_n \mid n \ge k $) of right, left, and two-sided regular ideals, where $L_n$ has quotient complexity (state complexity) $n$, such that $L_n$ is most complex in its class under the following measures of complexity: the size of the syntactic semigroup, the quotient complexities of the left quotients of $L_n$, the number of atoms (intersections of complemented and uncomplemented left quotients), the quotient complexities of the atoms, and the quotient complexities of reversal, star, product (concatenation), and all binary boolean operations. In that sense, these ideals are "most complex" languages in their classes, or "universal witnesses" to the complexity of the various operations.
Highlights
We begin informally, postponing definitions until Section 2
The languages Un meet the upper bounds for the size of the syntactic semigroup, the quotient complexities of left quotients, the number of atoms, the quotient complexities of the atoms, and the quotient complexities of the following operations: reversal, star, product, and all binary boolean operations
In this sense the languages in this sequence are most complex when compared to other regular languages of the same quotient complexity
Summary
We begin informally, postponing definitions until Section 2. The languages Un meet the upper bounds for the size of the syntactic semigroup, the quotient complexities of left quotients, the number of atoms (intersections of complemented and uncomplemented left quotients), the quotient complexities of the atoms, and the quotient complexities of the following operations: reversal, star, product (concatenation), and all binary boolean operations. In this sense the languages in this sequence are most complex when compared to other regular languages of the same quotient complexity. Additional examples of the use of ideals in applications can be found in [1, 16, 17, 24]
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More From: Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science
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