FLMay 11

A Factorization Theorem for Forest Algebras

arXiv:2605.1036858.8
AI Analysis

This provides a foundational tool for algebraic automata theory on trees, enabling bounded-depth decompositions for forest algebras under specific conditions.

The paper develops a factorization theorem for forests analogous to Simon's theorem for words, proving that morphisms satisfying a new semantic restriction (R-alignment) admit bounded-depth decompositions, while those without this restriction do not.

Simon's factorization theorem is a celebrated tool in algebraic automata theory, providing bounded-depth decompositions of words with respect to morphisms into finite semigroups. We develop an analogue of Simon's theorem for \emph{forests} in the setting of forest algebras. In contrast with words, this presents a basic difficulty: recursively factoring a forest requires keeping track of where each subforest ``fits''. This difficulty ripples throughout the proof, and we overcome it by augmenting the free forest algebra and by developing a framework that supports recursive factorization of forests, along with its semantic implications. Our main result identifies a new semantic restriction on morphisms (called $\mathcal{R}$-alignment) which intuitively ensures that different ways of cutting a forest remain compatible (in a certain sense) at the semigroup level. Under this condition, we prove that every morphism admits decompositions of bounded depth. We also prove that without this restriction, there are morphisms for which no bounded-depth decomposition exists (under our notion of decomposition).

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