Completion, MacNeille (of a partially ordered set)
completion by sections, Dedekind–MacNeille completion
The complete lattice $L$ obtained from a partially ordered set $M$ in the following way. Let $\mathcal{P}(M)$ be the set of all subsets of $M$, ordered by inclusion. For any $X \in \mathcal{P}(M)$ assume that $$ X^\Delta = \{ a \in M : a \ge x \ \text{for all}\ x \in X \} $$ $$ X^\nabla = \{ a \in M : a \le x \ \text{for all}\ x \in X \} $$ The condition $\phi(X) = (X^\Delta)^\nabla$ defines a closure operation (cf. Closure relation) $\phi$ on $\mathcal{P}(M)$. The lattice $L$ of all $\phi$-closed subsets of $\mathcal{P}(M)$ is complete. For any $x \in M$ the set $(x^\Delta)^\nabla$ is the principal ideal generated by $x$. Put $i(x) = (x^\Delta)^\nabla$ for all $x \in M$. Then $i$ is an isomorphic imbedding of $M$ into the complete lattice $L$ that preserves all least upper bounds and greatest lower bounds existing in $M$.
When applied to the ordered set of rational numbers, the construction described above gives the completion of the set of rational numbers by Dedekind sections.
References
[1] | H.M. MacNeille, "Partially ordered sets" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 42 (1937) pp. 416–460 |
Comments
The MacNeille completion of a Boolean algebra is a (complete) Boolean algebra, but the MacNeille completion of a distributive lattice need not be distributive (see [a1]). When restricted to Boolean algebras the MacNeille completion corresponds by Stone duality (cf. Stone space) to the construction of the absolute (or the Gleason cover construction) for compact zero-dimensional spaces (cf. Zero-dimensional space; [a2], p. 109).
References
[a1] | S.P. Crawley, "Regular embeddings which preserve lattice structure" Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. , 13 (1962) pp. 748–752 |
[a2] | P.T. Johnstone, "Stone spaces" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1982) |
Completion, MacNeille (of a partially ordered set). Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Completion,_MacNeille_(of_a_partially_ordered_set)&oldid=33799