The fixed point property in ordered sets of width two (Q1095161): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 12:28, 18 June 2024
scientific article
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English | The fixed point property in ordered sets of width two |
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The fixed point property in ordered sets of width two (English)
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1987
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The authors study the fixed point property in partially ordered sets of width two (every antichain contains at most two elements). Four-crown towers and belfries are defined, where a four-crown tower is a lexicographic sum of two-element antichains over a well-ordered index- set, and a belfry is - loosely speaking - a four-crown tower with a top to it. Theorem 1. Let P be an ordered set of width two. (1.1) If P has the fixed point property, then it contains a belfry (in P). (1.2) If P is chain- complete, then the following statements are equivalent: (a) P has the fixed point property, (b) P contains a belfry (in P), (c) no four-crown tower in P is a retract of P, (d) P is dismantlable. - Theorem 2. Let P be an ordered set of width two. If P or Q is chain-complete (Q is a poset of arbitrary width), and both P and Q have the fixed point property, then \(P\times Q\) has the fixed point property.
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fixed point property
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partially ordered sets
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width
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antichain
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Four- crown towers
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belfries
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chain-complete
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dismantlable
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