Upper set

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File:Upset 210div.svg
A Hasse diagram of the divisors of 210, ordered by the relation is divisor of, with the upper set 2 colored green. The white sets form the lower set 105.

In mathematics, an upper set (also called an upward closed set, an upset, or an isotone set in X)Template:Sfn of a partially ordered set (X,) is a subset SX with the following property: if s is in S and if x in X is larger than s (that is, if s<x), then x is in S. In other words, this means that any x element of X that is to some element of S is necessarily also an element of S. The term lower set (also called a downward closed set, down set, decreasing set, initial segment, or semi-ideal) is defined similarly as being a subset S of X with the property that any element x of X that is to some element of S is necessarily also an element of S.

Definition

Let (X,) be a preordered set. An Template:Em in X (also called an Template:Em, an Template:Em, or an Template:Em set)Template:Sfn is a subset UX that is "closed under going up", in the sense that

for all uU and all xX, if ux then xU.

The dual notion is a Template:Em (also called a Template:Em, Template:Em, Template:Em, Template:Em, or Template:Em), which is a subset LX that is "closed under going down", in the sense that

for all lL and all xX, if xl then xL.

The terms Template:Em or Template:Em are sometimes used as synonyms for lower set.[1][2][3] This choice of terminology fails to reflect the notion of an ideal of a lattice because a lower set of a lattice is not necessarily a sublattice.[1]

Properties

  • Every preordered set is an upper set of itself.
  • The intersection and the union of any family of upper sets is again an upper set.
  • The complement of any upper set is a lower set, and vice versa.
  • Given a partially ordered set (X,), the family of upper sets of X ordered with the inclusion relation is a complete lattice, the upper set lattice.
  • Given an arbitrary subset Y of a partially ordered set X, the smallest upper set containing Y is denoted using an up arrow as Y (see upper closure and lower closure).
    • Dually, the smallest lower set containing Y is denoted using a down arrow as Y.
  • A lower set is called principal if it is of the form {x} where x is an element of X.
  • Every lower set Y of a finite partially ordered set X is equal to the smallest lower set containing all maximal elements of Y
    • Y=Max(Y) where Max(Y) denotes the set containing the maximal elements of Y.
  • A directed lower set is called an order ideal.
  • For partial orders satisfying the descending chain condition, antichains and upper sets are in one-to-one correspondence via the following bijections: map each antichain to its upper closure (see below); conversely, map each upper set to the set of its minimal elements. This correspondence does not hold for more general partial orders; for example the sets of real numbers {x:x>0} and {x:x>1} are both mapped to the empty antichain.

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Upper closure and lower closure

Given an element x of a partially ordered set (X,), the upper closure or upward closure of x, denoted by xX, x, or x, is defined by xX=x={uX:xu} while the lower closure or downward closure of x, denoted by xX, x, or x, is defined by xX=x={lX:lx}.

The sets x and x are, respectively, the smallest upper and lower sets containing x as an element. More generally, given a subset AX, define the upper/upward closure and the lower/downward closure of A, denoted by AX and AX respectively, as AX=A=aAa and AX=A=aAa.

In this way, x={x} and x={x}, where upper sets and lower sets of this form are called principal. The upper closure and lower closure of a set are, respectively, the smallest upper set and lower set containing it.

The upper and lower closures, when viewed as functions from the power set of X to itself, are examples of closure operators since they satisfy all of the Kuratowski closure axioms. As a result, the upper closure of a set is equal to the intersection of all upper sets containing it, and similarly for lower sets. (Indeed, this is a general phenomenon of closure operators. For example, the topological closure of a set is the intersection of all closed sets containing it; the span of a set of vectors is the intersection of all subspaces containing it; the subgroup generated by a subset of a group is the intersection of all subgroups containing it; the ideal generated by a subset of a ring is the intersection of all ideals containing it; and so on.)

Ordinal numbers

An ordinal number is usually identified with the set of all smaller ordinal numbers. Thus each ordinal number forms a lower set in the class of all ordinal numbers, which are totally ordered by set inclusion.

See also

References

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