Containment order

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In the mathematical field of order theory, a containment order is the partial order that arises as the subset-containment relation on some collection of objects. In a simple way, every poset P = (≤, X) is (isomorphic to) a containment order. To see this, associate to each element x of X the set

 X_\leq(x) = \{ y \in X | y \leq x\} ;

then the transitivity of ≤ ensures that for all a and b in X, we have

 X_\leq(a) \subseteq X_\leq(b) \mbox{ precisely when } a \leq b .

More interestingly, several important classes of poset arise as containment orders for some natural collections, like the Boolean lattice Qn, which is the collection of all 2n subsets of an n-element set, the dimension-n orders, which are the containment orders on collections of n-boxes anchored at the origin, and the interval-containment orders, which are precisely the orders of dimension 2. Other containment orders that are interesting in their own right include the circle orders, which arise from disks in the plane, and the angle orders.

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[edit] References

  • Fishburn, P.C. and Trotter, W.T. (1998). "Geometric containment orders: a survey". Order 15: 167–182. doi:10.1023/A:1006110326269. 
  • Santoro, N., Sidney, J.B., Sidney, S.J., and Urrutia, J. (1989). "Geometric containment and partial orders". SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics 2: 245–254. doi:10.1137/0402021.