Hasse diagram of the product order on ×

In mathematics, given partial orders and on sets and , respectively, the product order[1][2][3][4] (also called the coordinatewise order[5][3][6] or componentwise order[2][7]) is a partial order on the Cartesian product Given two pairs and in declare that if and

Another possible order on is the lexicographical order. It is a total order if both and are totally ordered. However the product order of two total orders is not in general total; for example, the pairs and are incomparable in the product order of the order with itself. The lexicographic combination of two total orders is a linear extension of their product order, and thus the product order is a subrelation of the lexicographic order.[3]

The Cartesian product with the product order is the categorical product in the category of partially ordered sets with monotone functions.[7]

The product order generalizes to arbitrary (possibly infinitary) Cartesian products. Suppose is a set and for every is a preordered set. Then the product preorder on is defined by declaring for any and in that

if and only if for every

If every is a partial order then so is the product preorder.

Furthermore, given a set the product order over the Cartesian product can be identified with the inclusion order of subsets of [4]

The notion applies equally well to preorders. The product order is also the categorical product in a number of richer categories, including lattices and Boolean algebras.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Neggers, J.; Kim, Hee Sik (1998), "4.2 Product Order and Lexicographic Order", Basic Posets, World Scientific, pp. 64–78, ISBN 9789810235895
  2. ^ a b Sudhir R. Ghorpade; Balmohan V. Limaye (2010). A Course in Multivariable Calculus and Analysis. Springer. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-4419-1621-1.
  3. ^ a b c Egbert Harzheim (2006). Ordered Sets. Springer. pp. 86–88. ISBN 978-0-387-24222-4.
  4. ^ a b Victor W. Marek (2009). Introduction to Mathematics of Satisfiability. CRC Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4398-0174-1.
  5. ^ Davey & Priestley, Introduction to Lattices and Order (Second Edition), 2002, p. 18
  6. ^ Alexander Shen; Nikolai Konstantinovich Vereshchagin (2002). Basic Set Theory. American Mathematical Soc. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-8218-2731-4.
  7. ^ a b c Paul Taylor (1999). Practical Foundations of Mathematics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 144–145 and 216. ISBN 978-0-521-63107-5.


📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Monotonic function

a2 ≤ b2, ..., an ≤ bn (i.e. the Cartesian product {0, 1}n is ordered coordinatewise), then f(a1, ..., an) ≤ f(b1, ..., bn). In other words, a Boolean function

Distributive polytope

convex polytopes, a distributive polytope is a convex polytope for which coordinatewise minima and maxima of pairs of points remain within the polytope. For

Order polytope

order, and its dimension is the number of elements in the partial order. The order polytope is a distributive polytope, meaning that coordinatewise minima

Distributive lattice

distributive polytope (a convex polytope closed under coordinatewise minimum and coordinatewise maximum operations), with these two operations as the

Tamari lattice

another. It is the poset of sequences of n integers a1, ..., an, ordered coordinatewise, such that i ≤ ai ≤ n and if i ≤ j ≤ ai then aj ≤ ai (Huang & Tamari

Stable matching polytope

a different way than coordinatewise maximization and minimization. Instead, the order polytope of the underlying partial order of the lattice of stable

Universal algebra

structures is the cartesian product of the sets with the operations defined coordinatewise. The isomorphism theorems, which encompass the isomorphism theorems

Maximal and minimal elements

maxima of a point set are maximal with respect to the partial order of coordinatewise domination. In economics, one may relax the axiom of antisymmetry