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Let $P$ be a poset and $A$ a subset of $P$ . The upper set of $A$ is defined to be the set $$\lbrace b\in P\mid a\le b \mbox{ for some } a\in A\rbrace,$$ and is denoted by $\up A$ . In other words, $\up A$ is the set of all upper bounds of elements of $A$ .
$\uparrow$ can be viewed as a unary operator on the power set $2^P$ sending $A\in 2^P$ to $\up A \in 2^P$ . $\uparrow$ has the following properties
- $\up \varnothing=\varnothing$ ,
- $A\subseteq \up A$ ,
- $\uparrow \up A=\up A$ , and
- if $A\subseteq B$ , $\up A\subseteq \up B$ .
So $\uparrow$ is a closure operator.
An upper set in $P$ is a subset $A$ such that its upper set is itself: $\up A=A$ . In other words, $A$ is closed with respect to $\le$ in the sense that if $a\in A$ and $a\le b$ , then $b\in A$ . An upper set is also said to be upper closed. For this reason, for any subset $A$ of $P$ , the $\up A$ is also called the upper closure of $A$ .
Dually, the lower set (or lower closure) of $A$ is the set of all lower bounds of elements of $A$ . The lower set of $A$ is denoted by $\down A$ . If the lower set of $A$ is $A$ itself, then $A$ is a called a lower set, or a lower closed set.
Remarks.
- $\up A$ is not the same as the set of upper bounds of $A$ , commonly denoted by $A^u$ , which is defined as the set $\lbrace b\in P\mid a\le b\mbox{ for \emph{all} }a\in A\rbrace$ . Similarly, $\down A\neq A^{\ell}$ in general, where $A^{\ell}$ is the set of lower bounds of $A$ .
- When $A=\lbrace x\rbrace$ , we write $\up x$ for $\up A$ and $\down x$ for $\down A$ . $\up x = \lbrace x\rbrace ^u$ and $\down x=\lbrace x\rbrace ^d$ .
- If $P$ is a lattice and $x\in P$ , then $\up x$ is the principal filter generated by $x$ , and $\down x$ is the principal ideal generated by $x$ .
- If $A$ is a lower set of $P$ , then its set complement $A^{\complement}$ is an upper set: if $a\in A^{\complement}$ and $a\le b$ , then $b\in A^{\complement}$ by a contrapositive argument.
- Let $P$ be a poset. The set of all lower sets of $P$ is denoted by $\mathcal{O}(P)$ . It is easy to see that $\mathcal{O}(P)$ is a poset (ordered by inclusion), and $\mathcal{O}(P)^{\partial}=\mathcal{O}(P^{\partial})$ , where $^{\partial}$ is the dualization operation (meaning that $P^{\partial}$ is the dual poset of $P$ ).
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"upper set" is owned by CWoo.
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Cross-references: dual poset, operation, inclusion, easy to see, argument, contrapositive, complement, principal ideal, generated by, principal filter, lattice, lower bounds, closed, closure operator, properties, power set, operator, unary, upper bounds, subset, poset
There are 13 references to this entry.
This is version 17 of upper set, born on 2006-04-03, modified 2007-05-19.
Object id is 7801, canonical name is UpperSet.
Accessed 6561 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 06A06 (Order, lattices, ordered algebraic structures :: Ordered sets :: Partial order, general) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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