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An operation which brings a subset of a given set into correspondence with another subset so that if and are known, it is possible in some way to reproduce . Depending on the structure with which is endowed, one distinguishes various definitions of complementation, as well as various methods of reconstituting from and .

In the general theory of sets the complement of a subset (or complementary subset) in a set is the subset (or or ) consisting of all elements not belonging to ; an important property is the duality principle:

Let have a structure of a linear space and let be a subspace of . A subspace is said to be a direct algebraic complement (or algebraic complement, for short) of if any can be uniquely represented as , , . This is equivalent to the conditions ; . Any subspace of has an algebraic complement, but this complement is not uniquely determined.

Let be a linear topological space and let be the direct algebraic sum of its subspaces and , regarded as linear topological spaces with the induced topology. The one-to-one mapping of the Cartesian product onto , which is continuous by virtue of the linearity of the topology , does not have, in general, a continuous inverse. If this mapping is a homeomorphism, i.e. if is the direct topological sum of the spaces and , the subspace is said to be the direct topological complement of the subspace , the latter being known as a complementable subspace. Not all subspaces in an arbitrary linear topological space, not even the finite-dimensional ones, are complementable. The following necessary and sufficient condition for complementability holds: The subspace is topologically isomorphic to , where is an algebraic complement of . This criterion entails the following sufficient conditions for complementability: is closed and has finite codimension; is locally convex and is finite-dimensional; etc.

A special case of topological complementation is the orthogonal complement of a subspace of a Hilbert space . This is the set

which is a closed subspace of . An important fact in the theory of Hilbert spaces is that any closed subspace of a Hilbert space has an orthogonal complement, .

Finally, let be a conditionally order-complete vector lattice (a -space). The totality of elements of the form

which is a linear subspace of , is said to be the disjoint complement of the set . If is a linear subspace, then, in the general case, , but if is a component (also known as a band or an order-complete ideal), i.e. a linear subspace such that and imply that , and such that is closed with respect to least upper and greatest lower bounds, then (the set is a component for any ; is the smallest component containing the set ).

References

[1] N. Bourbaki, "Elements of mathematics. Theory of sets" , Addison-Wesley (1968) (Translated from French)
[2] N. Bourbaki, "Elements of mathematics. Topological vector spaces" , Addison-Wesley (1977) (Translated from French)
[3] G. Birkhoff, "Lattice theory" , Colloq. Publ. , 25 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1973)
[4] A.P. Robertson, W.S. Robertson, "Topological vector spaces" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1964)
[5] H.H. Schaefer, "Topological vector spaces" , Macmillan (1966)
[6] B.Z. Vulikh, "Introduction to the theory of partially ordered spaces" , Wolters-Noordhoff (1967) (Translated from Russian)


Comments

A conditionally (order-)complete vector lattice is a vector lattice that is a conditionally-complete lattice.

References

[a1] G. Köthe, "Topological vector spaces" , 1 , Springer (1969)
[a2] W.A.J. Luxemburg, A.C. Zaanen, "Riesz spaces" , I , North-Holland (1971)
How to Cite This Entry:
Complementation. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Complementation&oldid=35505
This article was adapted from an original article by V.I. Sobolev (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article