Completely distributive lattice explained

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 of L, we have

wedgej\in

vee
k\inKj

xj,k=veef\inwedgej\inxj,f(j)

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]

Alternative characterizations

Various different characterizations exist. For example, the following is an equivalent law that avoids the use of choice functions. 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

\begin{align}wedge\{veeY\midY\inS\}=vee\{wedgeZ\midZ\inS\#\}\end{align}

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

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.

Free completely distributive lattices

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

\phi:CL

such that for every completely distributive lattice M and monotonic function

f:CM

, there is a unique complete homomorphism
*
f
\phi:L

M

satisfying
*
f=f
\phi\circ\phi
. 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

(l{P}(X),\subseteq)

for any set X is a completely distributive lattice.[1]

See also

References

  1. B. A. Davey and H. A. Priestley, Introduction to Lattices and Order 2nd Edition, Cambridge University Press, 2002,, 10.23 Infinite distributive laws, pp. 239–240
  2. G. N. Raney, A subdirect-union representation for completely distributive complete lattices, Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 4: 518 - 522, 1953.
  3. Joseph M. Morris, Augmenting Types with Unbounded Demonic and Angelic Nondeterminacy, Mathematics of Program Construction, LNCS 3125, 274-288, 2004
  4. G. N. Raney, Completely distributive complete lattices, Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 3: 677 - 680, 1952.
  5. Alan Hopenwasser, Complete Distributivity, Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, 51(1), 285 - 305, 1990.