Tobias Kappé - An Elementary Proof of the FMP for Kleene Algebra

fi:12445 - Fundamenta Informaticae, February 6, 2026, Volume 195, Issues 1-4: Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science 2024 - https://doi.org/10.46298/fi.12445
An Elementary Proof of the FMP for Kleene AlgebraArticle

Authors: Tobias Kappé

    Kleene Algebra (KA) is a useful tool for proving that two programs are equivalent. Because KA's equational theory is decidable, it integrates well with interactive theorem provers. This raises the question: which equations can we (not) prove using the laws of KA? Moreover, which models of KA are complete, in the sense that they satisfy exactly the provable equations? Kozen (1994) answered these questions by characterizing KA in terms of its language model. Concretely, equivalences provable in KA are exactly those that hold for regular expressions.
    Pratt (1980) observed that KA is complete w.r.t. relational models, i.e., that its provable equations are those that hold for any relational interpretation. A less known result due to Palka (2005) says that finite models are complete for KA, i.e., that provable equivalences coincide with equations satisfied by all finite KAs. Phrased contrapositively, the latter is a finite model property (FMP): any unprovable equation is falsified by a finite KA. Both results can be argued using Kozen's theorem, but the implication is mutual: given that KA is complete w.r.t. finite (resp. relational) models, Palka's (resp. Pratt's) arguments show that it is complete w.r.t. the language model.
    We embark on a study of the different complete models of KA, and the connections between them. This yields a novel result subsuming those of Palka and Pratt, namely that KA is complete w.r.t. finite relational models. Next, we put an algebraic spin on Palka's techniques, which yield a new elementary proof of the finite model property, and by extension, of Kozen's and Pratt's theorems. In contrast with earlier approaches, this proof relies not on minimality or bisimilarity of automata, but rather on representing the regular expressions involved in terms of transformation automata.


    Volume: Volume 195, Issues 1-4: Relational and Algebraic Methods in Computer Science 2024
    Published on: February 6, 2026
    Accepted on: November 10, 2024
    Submitted on: October 20, 2023
    Keywords: Formal Languages and Automata Theory, Logic in Computer Science

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