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lattice homomorphism (Definition)

Let $L$ and $M$ be lattices. A map $\phi$ from $L$ to $M$ is called a lattice homomorphism if $\phi$ respects meet and join. That is, for $a,b\in L$ ,

  • $\phi(a\land b)=\phi(a)\land\phi(b)$ , and
  • $\phi(a\lor b)=\phi(a)\lor\phi(b)$ .

From this definition, one also defines lattice isomorphism, lattice endomorphism, lattice automorphism respectively, as a bijective lattice homomorphism, a lattice homomorphism into itself, and a lattice isomorphism onto itself.

If in addition $L$ is a bounded lattice with top $1$ and bottom $0$ , with $\phi$ and $M$ defined as above, then $\phi(a)=\phi(1\wedge a)=\phi(1)\wedge\phi(a)$ , and $\phi(a)=\phi(0\vee a)=\phi(0)\vee\phi(a)$ for all $a\in L$ . Thus $L$ is mapped onto a bounded sublattice $\phi(L)$ of $M$ , with top $\phi(1)$ and bottom $\phi(0)$ .

If both $L$ and $M$ are bounded with lattice homomorphism $\phi:L\to M$ , then $\phi$ is said to be a $\lbrace 0,1\rbrace$ -lattice homomorphism if $\phi(1)$ and $\phi(0)$ are top and bottom of $M$ . In other words,

$$\phi(1_L)=1_M\qquad\mbox{ and }\qquad\phi(0_L)=0_M,$$

where $1_L,1_M,0_L,0_M$ are top and bottom elements of $L$ and $M$ respectively.

Remarks.

  • The idea behind these definitions comes from the idea of a homomorphism between two algebraic systems of the same type. We require the the homomorphism to preserve all finitary operations, including the nullary ones. This means that if the algebraic system contains constants, they need to be preserved under the homomorphism. Thus, if $L$ and $M$ are both bounded lattices, a homomorphism between $L$ and $M$ must preserve $0$ and $1$ . Similarly, if $L$ only has $0$ and $M$ is bounded, then a homomorphism between them should preserve $0$ alone.
  • In the case of complete lattices, there are operations that are infinitary, so the homomorphism between two complete lattices should preserve the infinitary operations as well. The resulting lattice homomorphism is a complete lattice homomorphism.
  • One can show that every Boolean algebra $B$ can be embedded into the power set of some set $S$ . That is, there is a one-to-one lattice homomorphism $\phi$ from $B$ into a Boolean subalgebra of $2^S$ (under the usual set union and set intersection operations). If $B$ is in addition a complete lattice and an atomic lattice, then $B$ is lattice isomorphic to $2^S$ for some set $S$ .




"lattice homomorphism" is owned by CWoo.
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See Also: order-preserving map

Also defines:  lattice isomorphism, lattice endomorphism, lattice automorphism, $\lbrace 0,1\rbrace$-lattice homomorphism

Attachments:
example of a non-lattice homomorphism (Example) by Algeboy
example of non-complete lattice homomorphism (Example) by Algeboy
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Cross-references: isomorphic, lattice, atomic lattice, complete lattice, intersection, union, Boolean subalgebra, one-to-one, power set, Boolean algebra, complete lattice homomorphism, complete, contains, operations, preserve, type, algebraic systems, homomorphism, definitions, elements, sublattice, bounded, bottom, top, bounded lattice, addition, onto, bijective, join, meet, map
There are 17 references to this entry.

This is version 8 of lattice homomorphism, born on 2006-02-18, modified 2007-05-24.
Object id is 7635, canonical name is LatticeHomomorphism.
Accessed 5546 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC06B05 (Order, lattices, ordered algebraic structures :: Lattices :: Structure theory)
 06B99 (Order, lattices, ordered algebraic structures :: Lattices :: Miscellaneous)

Pending Errata and Addenda
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Complete lattice homomorphism? by porton on 2007-04-19 17:44:27
What about "complete lattice homomorphism" that is homomorphism which preserves infinite meets and joins?
--
Victor Porton - http://www.mathematics21.org
* Algebraic General Topology and Math Synthesis
* 21 Century Math Method (post axiomatic math logic)
* Category Theory - new concepts
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