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Rank of a partially ordered set

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
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The maximum cardinality of a chain in a partially ordered set. If $(P,\le)$ is a partially ordered set then the rank of $b$ relative to $a$, where $a \le b$, is the rank of the interval $[a,b]$; if $P$ has a minimum element $0$, then the rank $\rho(x)$ of an element $x$ is the rank of $x$ relative to $0$. A chain $C$ in $P$ is maximal if no proper superset of $C$ is a chain. If all maximal chains have the same cardinality, then $P$ is said to be graded by rank.

If the rank of each element of the poset $(P,\le)$ is finite, and there is a finite number $p_n$ of elements of rank $n$ (in particular, if $P$ is finite) then the rank generating function of $P$ is the formal series $$ \sum_{n=0}^\infty p_n z^n \ . $$

A lattice with a rank function $\rho$ is (upper) semi-modular if $$ \rho(x) + \rho(y) \ge \rho(x \vee y) + \rho(x \wedge y) $$ and modular if $$ \rho(x) + \rho(y) = \rho(x \vee y) + \rho(x \wedge y) \ . $$


References

  • Stanley, Richard P. Enumerative combinatorics I Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole (1986) ISBN 0-534-06546-5 Zbl 0608.05001
How to Cite This Entry:
Rank of a partially ordered set. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Rank_of_a_partially_ordered_set&oldid=54757