Directed sets and directed completeness are key concepts in order theory, providing a framework for understanding limits and completeness in abstract structures. These ideas generalize sequences from analysis to more complex mathematical settings, offering insights into partially ordered sets.
Directed sets have special properties that allow for the study of upper and lower bounds. Directed completeness extends this notion, requiring that every directed subset has a supremum. This concept is crucial in fixed point theorems and has applications in computer science and domain theory.
Definition of directed sets
Fundamental concept in order theory providing structure to partially ordered sets
Generalizes the notion of sequences in analysis to more abstract mathematical structures
Plays crucial role in studying limits and completeness in ordered structures
Properties of directed sets
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Non-empty set D with a preorder relation ≤
For any two elements x, y ∈ D, there exists z ∈ D such that x ≤ z and y ≤ z
Reflexivity holds for all elements in D (a ≤ a for all a ∈ D)
Transitivity applies (if a ≤ b and b ≤ c, then a ≤ c)
Does not require antisymmetry, distinguishing it from partial orders
Examples of directed sets
Natural numbers with usual ordering (any two elements have a common upper bound)
Power set of a set ordered by inclusion (union of any two subsets serves as upper bound)
Real numbers with standard ordering (maximum of two numbers is an upper bound)
Set of all finite subsets of an infinite set ordered by inclusion
Positive real numbers ordered by divisibility (least common multiple as upper bound)
Directed subsets
Subsets of partially ordered sets that maintain directed properties
Essential for studying completeness and fixed point theorems in order theory
Provide localized structure within larger ordered sets
Upper bounds of directed subsets
Elements greater than or equal to all elements in the directed subset
May not exist for all directed subsets in a given partially ordered set
When they exist, form a set of candidates for the supremum of the directed subset
Play crucial role in defining directed completeness of ordered structures
Can be used to construct new directed sets (set of upper bounds often forms a filter)
Lower bounds of directed subsets
Elements less than or equal to all elements in the directed subset
Less commonly used than upper bounds in the context of directed sets
May not exist for all directed subsets in a given partially ordered set
When they exist, form a set of candidates for the infimum of the directed subset
Useful in dual constructions and certain order-theoretic arguments
Directed completeness
Fundamental property in order theory related to the existence of suprema for directed subsets
Generalizes concepts of completeness from real analysis to more abstract ordered structures
Crucial in fixed point theorems and domain theory in computer science
Definition of directed completeness
Partially ordered set P is directed complete if every directed subset has a supremum in P
Requires existence of least upper bound for all non-empty directed subsets
Formally, for any directed subset D ⊆ P, sup D ∈ P \sup D \in P sup D ∈ P exists
Also known as directed-complete partial order (dcpo)
Weaker notion than complete lattice, as it only requires suprema for directed subsets
Properties of directed complete posets
Contain all finite suprema of their elements
Closed under directed suprema of monotone functions
Satisfy fixed point theorems (Knaster-Tarski, Kleene)
Form cartesian closed category, important in denotational semantics
May not have all infima or suprema of arbitrary subsets
Include complete lattices and ω-complete partial orders as special cases
Directed supremum
Least upper bound of a directed subset in a partially ordered set
Key concept in studying completeness and continuity in order theory
Generalizes notion of limit from analysis to more abstract structures
Existence of directed supremum
Not guaranteed in all partially ordered sets
Defines directed completeness when it exists for all directed subsets
Can be constructed as union of all elements in some cases (power sets)
May require axiom of choice for existence in certain infinite structures
Existence often proved using Zorn's lemma in more complex scenarios
Uniqueness of directed supremum
Always unique when it exists due to antisymmetry of partial orders
Defined as least element of the set of upper bounds of a directed subset
Can be characterized by universal property: ∀ x ∈ D , x ≤ sup D \forall x \in D, x \leq \sup D ∀ x ∈ D , x ≤ sup D and ∀ y , ( ∀ x ∈ D , x ≤ y ) ⟹ sup D ≤ y \forall y, (\forall x \in D, x \leq y) \implies \sup D \leq y ∀ y , ( ∀ x ∈ D , x ≤ y ) ⟹ sup D ≤ y
Preserved under order isomorphisms between partially ordered sets
Plays crucial role in defining Scott continuity of functions between ordered structures