Ordered sets
Arun Ram
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
University of Melbourne
Parkville, VIC 3010 Australia
aram@unimelb.edu.au
Last updates: 07 January 2012
Ordered sets
Let be a set.
-
A partial order on
is a relation on
such that
-
If
and and
then
, and
-
If
and and then .
Stanley adds the axiom: if then
. Bourbaki adds the axiom:
if and
then
and . Bourbaki defines a preorder to be the same excpet without the axiom (b).
-
Let be a set. A total order on is a partial order such that
-
If then
or
.
-
A partially ordered set or poset is a set
with a partial order
on .
-
A totally ordered set is a set
with a total order
on .
Let be a poset and let . Write
Let be a poset and let be a subset
of .
-
An upper bound of
is an element such that if
then
.
-
A lower bound of
is an element such that if
then
.
-
A greatest lower bound of
is an element such that
- is a lower bound of , and
- if is a lower bound of then .
-
A least upper bound of
is an element such that
- is a upper bound of , and
- if is a upper bound of then .
- The set is bounded if
has both and upper bound and a lower bound in
.
- A minimal element of is an element
such that if
and
then
.
- A maximal element of is an element
such that if
and
then
.
- A smallest element of is an element
such that if then .
- A largest element of is an element
such that if then .
HW: Show that if is a poset and is a
subset of and a greatest lower bound of
exists then it is unique.
HW: True or false: If is a poset and is
a subset of then a greatest lower bound of
exists.
HW: True or false: If is a poset and is
a subset of and a minimal element of exists
then it is unique.
HW: True or false: If is a poset and is
a subset of then a minimal element of
exists.
HW: True or false: If is a poset and is
a subset of then a largest element of exists.
HW: True or false: If is a poset and is
a subset of and a largest element of exists
then it is unique.
HASSE DIAGRAM NEEDS TO GO IN HERE SOMEWHERE
Let be a poset.
-
The poset is left filtered if satisfies:
if then
has a lower bound in
.
-
The poset is right filtered if satisfies:
if then
has a upper bound in
.
-
The poset is a lattice if satisfies:
if then
has a greatest lower bound and a least upper bound in .
-
A poset is well ordered if
satisfies: every nonempty subset
of has a smallest element.
HW: Show that if is a right filtered poset
and is a maximal element of then
is the largest element of .
HW: Show that every well ordered set is totally ordered.
HW: Show that there exists totally ordered sets that are not well ordered.
Let be a poset.
-
A lower order ideal of
is a subset of
such that if
,
and
then .
-
The intervals in are the sets
for .
-
The
sets
for are
closed intervals and the
sets
for are
open intervals.
Let be a totally ordered set. An open set
is a subset such that
IS THIS DEFINING A TOPOLOGY OR NOT? SHOULD THIS REALLY BE HERE, OR IN THE EXERCISES?
OR IN TOPOLOGIES?
HW: Show that if is a lattice then the intersection of
two intervals is an interval.
HW: Give an example of a poset such that the collection
is not a topology.
Notes and References
The orders on the number systems are indispensible for ordinary daily measurements.
Perhaps surprisingly, there is no partial order on
which makes an ordered field. A frequently
used partial order which is not a total order is inclusion of sets.
The definitions of left filtered and right filtered are
used in the theory of inverse and direct limits. The definitions and examples
of upper and lower bounds, suprema and infima, maxima and minima, and largest
and smallest element, are a natural way to introduce students to analyses and
proofs of existence and uniqueness.
Fundamental definitions and properties of partially ordered are treated thoroughly
in [Bou, Ens Ch. III]. The exposition of Stanley [St, Ch. 3] has an inspiring modern point of view and a wealth of information on the important subject of posets.
References
[Bou]
N. Bourbaki, Théorie des Ensembles, Chapter III,
Masson, Springer-Verlag, 1970
MR??????
[St]
R. Stanley, Enumerative combinatorics I, Chapter 3,
Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 49,
Cambridge University Press, 1997.
MR??????
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