
TL;DR
This paper characterizes when two inverse semigroups have identical tight groupoids using algebraic and topological conditions, introduces the notion of consonance, and constructs a maximal 'tight envelope' inverse semigroup.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of consonance for inverse semigroup homomorphisms and establishes their role in characterizing tight groupoid isomorphisms, along with constructing the tight envelope.
Findings
Consonance between inverse semigroups is equivalent to their tight groupoids being isomorphic.
A largest inverse semigroup consonant to a given one exists, called the tight envelope.
The tight envelope is formed by the compact up-slices in the tight groupoid.
Abstract
We study necessary and sufficient conditions for two inverse semigroups to possess identical tight groupoids from the point of view of their algebraic, topological, and spectral order structures. The spectral order is a partial order relation that presents itself very naturally on the tight groupoid of an inverse semigroup and is related to the subtle difference between tight filters and ultra-filters. Up to a small glitch, the spectral order makes tight groupoids into ordered groupoids in Ehresmann's sense. We introduce the notions of tight injectivity and tight surjectivity for inverse semigroup homomorphisms and show that, together, they provide necessary and sufficient conditions for the induced map to be an isomorphism of ordered topological groupoids. A homomorphism is then called a consonance provided these conditions are met. A consonance is not necessarily injective or…
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