dual of Dilworth’s theorem
Theorem 1.
Let P be a poset of height h. Then P can be partitioned into h antichains and furthermore at least h antichains are required.
Proof.
Induction on h. If h=1, then no elements of P are comparable
, so P is an antichain. Now suppose that P has height h≥2 and that the theorem is true for h-1. Let A1 be the set of maximal elements
of P. Then A1 is an antichain in P and P-A1 has height h-1 since we have removed precisely one element from every chain. Hence, P-A1 can be paritioned into h-1 antichains A2,A3,…Ah. Now we have the partition
A1∪A2∪…∪Ah of P into h antichains as desired.
The necessity of h antichains is trivial by the pigeonhole principle; since P has height h, it has a chain of length h, and each element of this chain must be placed in a different antichain of our partition.
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Title | dual of Dilworth’s theorem |
---|---|
Canonical name | DualOfDilworthsTheorem |
Date of creation | 2013-03-22 15:01:49 |
Last modified on | 2013-03-22 15:01:49 |
Owner | justice (4961) |
Last modified by | justice (4961) |
Numerical id | 7 |
Author | justice (4961) |
Entry type | Theorem |
Classification | msc 06A06 |
Related topic | DilworthsTheorem |