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Determining When an Algebra Is an Evolution Algebra

Miguel BustamanteSchool of Mathematics and Statistics, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, IrelandPauline MellonSchool of Mathematics and Statistics, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, IrelandMaría V. VelascoDepartamento de Análisis Matemático, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain
2020en
ABI

Abstract

Evolution algebras are non-associative algebras that describe non-Mendelian hereditary processes and have connections with many other areas. In this paper, we obtain necessary and sufficient conditions for a given algebra A to be an evolution algebra. We prove that the problem is equivalent to the so-called SDC problem, that is, the simultaneous diagonalisation via congruence of a given set of matrices. More precisely we show that an n-dimensional algebra A is an evolution algebra if and only if a certain set of n symmetric n×n matrices {M1,…,Mn} describing the product of A are SDC. We apply this characterisation to show that while certain classical genetic algebras (representing Mendelian and auto-tetraploid inheritance) are not themselves evolution algebras, arbitrarily small perturbations of these are evolution algebras. This is intringuing, as evolution algebras model asexual reproduction, unlike the classical ones.

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