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\phi(XYX)=\phi(X)\phi(Y)\phi(X), \qquad \text{for all } X,Y\in\mathcal{R}. \] Assuming that the centre of $\mathbb{D}$ has more than two elements, we give a criterion for automatic additivity and show that there are exactly two obstructions. The first one is scalar: it occurs precisely when $\mathcal{R}$ has a direct ring summand isomorphic to $\mathbb{D}$ and $\mathbb{D}$ is isomorphic to neither $\mathbb{F}_3$ nor $\mathbb{F}_4$. The second one is order-theoretic: it occurs when a nonsymmetric comparable pair $i\preceq j$, $j\not\preceq i$, admits no third index $k\notin\{i,j\}$ comparable with both $i$ and $j$. If neither obstruction occurs, all injective Jordan semi-triple maps are additive. The centre-size hypothesis is sharp: for $n\ge3$, the upper-triangular ring $T_n(\mathbb{F}_2)$ has neither obstruction but nevertheless admits nonadditive injective Jordan semi-triple maps. Finally, in the additive case, we describe the maps componentwise, in terms of endomorphisms, anti-endomorphisms, and transitive multipliers.
From: Ilja Gogić [view email]
[v1]
Tue, 2 Jun 2026 10:32:31 UTC (34 KB)
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