properties of Lattices

Comprehensive study notes, diagrams, and exam preparation for properties of Lattices.

Properties of Lattices

Definition

A lattice is a poset such that for every pair of elements :

  • the greatest lower bound exists, called the meet and written
  • the least upper bound exists, called the join and written

So, a lattice is a set with an order relation where every two elements can be combined in two ways:

meet

  • : the largest element below both

join

  • : the smallest element above both

Basic notation

For elements and in a lattice:

  • : meet
  • : join

Example: In the set of all subsets of , ordered by inclusion:


Main Content

1. Fundamental Algebraic Properties

Commutative law

  • :
  • This means the order of elements does not matter.
  • Example: ,

Associative law

  • :
  • This allows us to group elements in any way.
  • Example:

These laws make lattice operations behave much like familiar operations in arithmetic and set theory.

2. Absorption and Idempotent Properties

Idempotent law

  • :
  • Combining an element with itself gives the same element.
  • Example: ,

Absorption law

  • :
  • This expresses that one operation “absorbs” the other.
  • Example:

These properties are central because they connect the meet and join operations in a lattice.

3. Order-Theoretic and Structural Properties

Partial order compatibility

  • :
  • The lattice order is determined by meet and join:
    • if and only if
    • if and only if
  • This helps translate order problems into algebraic ones.

Bounded lattice properties

  • :
  • If a lattice has a least element and greatest element , it is called a bounded lattice.
  • Then:
  • Example: In power set lattices, and

Duality principle

  • :
  • Many lattice statements remain true if we swap:
    • with
    • with
    • with
  • This is called dual reasoning.
  • Example:
    • If , then dually

This structural viewpoint is extremely useful in proving lattice theorems efficiently.


Working / Process

1. Identify the set and order relation

  • Determine the elements and how they are ordered.
  • Example: subsets ordered by , numbers ordered by , or divisors ordered by divisibility.

2. Find meet and join for each pair

  • Compute the greatest lower bound and least upper bound.
  • For sets: meet = intersection, join = union.
  • For divisors of a number: meet = gcd, join = lcm.

3. Verify lattice properties

  • Check commutativity, associativity, idempotence, and absorption.
  • Determine whether the lattice is bounded, distributive, complemented, modular, or complete if needed.

Example for subsets of :

        {1,2,3}
       /   |   \
   {1,2} {1,3} {2,3}
     | \    |    / |
     |  \   |   /  |
    {1}  {2} {3}
       \   |   /
           ∅

Here:

  • bottom element is
  • top element is
  • meet of and is
  • join of them is

Advantages / Applications

Helps simplify ordered structures

  • Lattices provide a unified way to study order, bounds, and combining elements.
  • This makes complex posets easier to analyze.

Widely used in set theory and algebra

  • Power sets, divisor lattices, Boolean algebras, and subspace lattices are all important examples.
  • In each case, meet and join have natural meanings.

Important in logic and computer science

  • Lattices are used in propositional logic, digital circuits, formal concept analysis, compiler design, and data flow analysis.
  • They help model information flow, dependencies, and state systems.

Supports advanced mathematical properties

  • Many special classes of lattices are studied through these properties:
    • distributive lattices
    • modular lattices
    • complemented lattices
    • complete lattices

Useful for combinatorics

  • Lattice structures appear in counting problems, ordering of partitions, and combinatorial proofs.
  • Hasse diagrams make these structures easier to visualize and compare.

Summary

  • A lattice is a poset where every pair of elements has a meet and join.
  • Its main properties include commutativity, associativity, idempotence, absorption, and order compatibility.
  • Lattices can be bounded, distributive, modular, complemented, or complete depending on additional structure.
  • Important terms to remember: poset, meet, join, greatest lower bound, least upper bound, bounded lattice, distributive lattice, modular lattice, complemented lattice, duality