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Completely distributive lattice

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In the mathematical area of order theory, a completely distributive lattice is a complete lattice in which arbitrary joins distribute over arbitrary meets.

Formally, a complete lattice L is said to be completely distributive if, for any doubly indexed family {xj,k | j in J, k in Kj} of L, we have

where F is the set of choice functions f choosing for each index j of J some index f(j) in Kj.[1]

Complete distributivity is a self-dual property, i.e. dualizing the above statement yields the same class of complete lattices.[1]

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Alternative characterizations

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Various different characterizations exist. For example, the following is an equivalent law that avoids the use of choice functions[citation needed]. For any set S of sets, we define the set S# to be the set of all subsets X of the complete lattice that have non-empty intersection with all members of S. We then can define complete distributivity via the statement

The operator ( )# might be called the crosscut operator. This version of complete distributivity only implies the original notion when admitting the Axiom of Choice.


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Properties

In addition, it is known that the following statements are equivalent for any complete lattice L:[2]

Direct products of [0,1], i.e. sets of all functions from some set X to [0,1] ordered pointwise, are also called cubes.

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Free completely distributive lattices

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Every poset C can be completed in a completely distributive lattice.

A completely distributive lattice L is called the free completely distributive lattice over a poset C if and only if there is an order embedding such that for every completely distributive lattice M and monotonic function , there is a unique complete homomorphism satisfying . For every poset C, the free completely distributive lattice over a poset C exists and is unique up to isomorphism.[3]

This is an instance of the concept of free object. Since a set X can be considered as a poset with the discrete order, the above result guarantees the existence of the free completely distributive lattice over the set X.

Examples

  • The unit interval [0,1], ordered in the natural way, is a completely distributive lattice.[4]
  • The power set lattice for any set X is a completely distributive lattice.[1]
  • For every poset C, there is a free completely distributive lattice over C.[3] See the section on Free completely distributive lattices above.
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See also

References

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