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Wikipedia

Well-quasi-ordering

Transitive binary relations
Symmetric Antisymmetric Connected Well-founded Has joins Has meets Reflexive Irreflexive Asymmetric
Total, Semiconnex Anti-
reflexive
Equivalence relation Y Y
Preorder (Quasiorder) Y
Partial order Y Y
Total preorder Y Y
Total order Y Y Y
Prewellordering Y Y Y
Well-quasi-ordering Y Y
Well-ordering Y Y Y Y
Lattice Y Y Y Y
Join-semilattice Y Y Y
Meet-semilattice Y Y Y
Strict partial order Y Y Y
Strict weak order Y Y Y
Strict total order Y Y Y Y
Symmetric Antisymmetric Connected Well-founded Has joins Has meets Reflexive Irreflexive Asymmetric
Definitions, for all and
Y indicates that the column's property is always true the row's term (at the very left), while indicates that the property is not guaranteed in general (it might, or might not, hold). For example, that every equivalence relation is symmetric, but not necessarily antisymmetric, is indicated by Y in the "Symmetric" column and in the "Antisymmetric" column, respectively.

All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation be transitive: for all if and then
A term's definition may require additional properties that are not listed in this table.

In mathematics, specifically order theory, a well-quasi-ordering or wqo on a set is a quasi-ordering of for which every infinite sequence of elements from contains an increasing pair with

Motivation edit

Well-founded induction can be used on any set with a well-founded relation, thus one is interested in when a quasi-order is well-founded. (Here, by abuse of terminology, a quasiorder   is said to be well-founded if the corresponding strict order   is a well-founded relation.) However the class of well-founded quasiorders is not closed under certain operations—that is, when a quasi-order is used to obtain a new quasi-order on a set of structures derived from our original set, this quasiorder is found to be not well-founded. By placing stronger restrictions on the original well-founded quasiordering one can hope to ensure that our derived quasiorderings are still well-founded.

An example of this is the power set operation. Given a quasiordering   for a set   one can define a quasiorder   on  's power set   by setting   if and only if for each element of   one can find some element of   that is larger than it with respect to  . One can show that this quasiordering on   needn't be well-founded, but if one takes the original quasi-ordering to be a well-quasi-ordering, then it is.

Formal definition edit

A well-quasi-ordering on a set   is a quasi-ordering (i.e., a reflexive, transitive binary relation) such that any infinite sequence of elements   from   contains an increasing pair   with  . The set   is said to be well-quasi-ordered, or shortly wqo.

A well partial order, or a wpo, is a wqo that is a proper ordering relation, i.e., it is antisymmetric.

Among other ways of defining wqo's, one is to say that they are quasi-orderings which do not contain infinite strictly decreasing sequences (of the form  )[1] nor infinite sequences of pairwise incomparable elements. Hence a quasi-order (X, ≤) is wqo if and only if (X, <) is well-founded and has no infinite antichains.

Ordinal type edit

Let   be well partially ordered. A (necessarily finite) sequence   of elements of   that contains no pair   with   is usually called a bad sequence. The tree of bad sequences   is the tree that contains a vertex for each bad sequence, and an edge joining each nonempty bad sequence   to its parent  . The root of   corresponds to the empty sequence. Since   contains no infinite bad sequence, the tree   contains no infinite path starting at the root.[citation needed] Therefore, each vertex   of   has an ordinal height  , which is defined by transfinite induction as  . The ordinal type of  , denoted  , is the ordinal height of the root of  .

A linearization of   is an extension of the partial order into a total order. It is easy to verify that   is an upper bound on the ordinal type of every linearization of  . De Jongh and Parikh[1] proved that in fact there always exists a linearization of   that achieves the maximal ordinal type  .

Examples edit

 
Pic.1: Integer numbers with the usual order
 
Pic.2: Hasse diagram of the natural numbers ordered by divisibility
 
Pic.3: Hasse diagram of   with componentwise order
  •  , the set of natural numbers with standard ordering, is a well partial order (in fact, a well-order). However,  , the set of positive and negative integers, is not a well-quasi-order, because it is not well-founded (see Pic.1).
  •  , the set of natural numbers ordered by divisibility, is not a well-quasi-order: the prime numbers are an infinite antichain (see Pic.2).
  •  , the set of vectors of   natural numbers (where   is finite) with component-wise ordering, is a well partial order (Dickson's lemma; see Pic.3). More generally, if   is well-quasi-order, then   is also a well-quasi-order for all  .
  • Let   be an arbitrary finite set with at least two elements. The set   of words over   ordered lexicographically (as in a dictionary) is not a well-quasi-order because it contains the infinite decreasing sequence  . Similarly,   ordered by the prefix relation is not a well-quasi-order, because the previous sequence is an infinite antichain of this partial order. However,   ordered by the subsequence relation is a well partial order.[2] (If   has only one element, these three partial orders are identical.)
  • More generally,  , the set of finite  -sequences ordered by embedding is a well-quasi-order if and only if   is a well-quasi-order (Higman's lemma). Recall that one embeds a sequence   into a sequence   by finding a subsequence of   that has the same length as   and that dominates it term by term. When   is an unordered set,   if and only if   is a subsequence of  .
  •  , the set of infinite sequences over a well-quasi-order  , ordered by embedding, is not a well-quasi-order in general. That is, Higman's lemma does not carry over to infinite sequences. Better-quasi-orderings have been introduced to generalize Higman's lemma to sequences of arbitrary lengths.
  • Embedding between finite trees with nodes labeled by elements of a wqo   is a wqo (Kruskal's tree theorem).
  • Embedding between infinite trees with nodes labeled by elements of a wqo   is a wqo (Nash-Williams' theorem).
  • Embedding between countable scattered linear order types is a well-quasi-order (Laver's theorem).
  • Embedding between countable boolean algebras is a well-quasi-order. This follows from Laver's theorem and a theorem of Ketonen.
  • Finite graphs ordered by a notion of embedding called "graph minor" is a well-quasi-order (Robertson–Seymour theorem).
  • Graphs of finite tree-depth ordered by the induced subgraph relation form a well-quasi-order,[3] as do the cographs ordered by induced subgraphs.[4]

Constructing new wpo's from given ones edit

Let   and   be two disjoint wpo sets. Let  , and define a partial order on   by letting   if and only if   for the same   and  . Then   is wpo, and  , where   denotes natural sum of ordinals.[1]

Given wpo sets   and  , define a partial order on the Cartesian product  , by letting   if and only if   and  . Then   is wpo (this is a generalization of Dickson's lemma), and  , where   denotes natural product of ordinals.[1]

Given a wpo set  , let   be the set of finite sequences of elements of  , partially ordered by the subsequence relation. Meaning, let   if and only if there exist indices   such that   for each  . By Higman's lemma,   is wpo. The ordinal type of   is[1][5]

 

Given a wpo set  , let   be the set of all finite rooted trees whose vertices are labeled by elements of  . Partially order   by the tree embedding relation. By Kruskal's tree theorem,   is wpo. This result is nontrivial even for the case   (which corresponds to unlabeled trees), in which case   equals the small Veblen ordinal. In general, for   countable, we have the upper bound   in terms of the   ordinal collapsing function. (The small Veblen ordinal equals   in this ordinal notation.)[6]

Wqo's versus well partial orders edit

In practice, the wqo's one manipulates are quite often not orderings (see examples above), and the theory is technically smoother[citation needed] if we do not require antisymmetry, so it is built with wqo's as the basic notion. On the other hand, according to Milner 1985, no real gain in generality is obtained by considering quasi-orders rather than partial orders... it is simply more convenient to do so.

Observe that a wpo is a wqo, and that a wqo gives rise to a wpo between equivalence classes induced by the kernel of the wqo. For example, if we order   by divisibility, we end up with   if and only if  , so that  .

Infinite increasing subsequences edit

If   is wqo then every infinite sequence   contains an infinite increasing subsequence   (with  ). Such a subsequence is sometimes called perfect. This can be proved by a Ramsey argument: given some sequence  , consider the set   of indexes   such that   has no larger or equal   to its right, i.e., with  . If   is infinite, then the  -extracted subsequence contradicts the assumption that   is wqo. So   is finite, and any   with   larger than any index in   can be used as the starting point of an infinite increasing subsequence.

The existence of such infinite increasing subsequences is sometimes taken as a definition for well-quasi-ordering, leading to an equivalent notion.

Properties of wqos edit

  • Given a quasiordering   the quasiordering   defined by   is well-founded if and only if   is a wqo.[7]
  • A quasiordering is a wqo if and only if the corresponding partial order (obtained by quotienting by  ) has no infinite descending sequences or antichains. (This can be proved using a Ramsey argument as above.)
  • Given a well-quasi-ordering  , any sequence of upward-closed subsets   eventually stabilises (meaning there exists   such that  ; a subset   is called upward-closed if  ): assuming the contrary  , a contradiction is reached by extracting an infinite non-ascending subsequence.
  • Given a well-quasi-ordering  , any subset   of   has a finite number of minimal elements with respect to  , for otherwise the minimal elements of   would constitute an infinite antichain.

See also edit

Notes edit

^ Here x < y means:   and  

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d de Jongh, Dick H. G.; Parikh, Rohit (1977). "Well-partial orderings and hierarchies". Indagationes Mathematicae (Proceedings). 80 (3): 195–207. doi:10.1016/1385-7258(77)90067-1.
  2. ^ Gasarch, W. (1998), "A survey of recursive combinatorics", Handbook of Recursive Mathematics, Vol. 2, Stud. Logic Found. Math., vol. 139, Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 1041–1176, doi:10.1016/S0049-237X(98)80049-9, MR 1673598. See in particular page 1160.
  3. ^ Nešetřil, Jaroslav; Ossona de Mendez, Patrice (2012), "Lemma 6.13", Sparsity: Graphs, Structures, and Algorithms, Algorithms and Combinatorics, vol. 28, Heidelberg: Springer, p. 137, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-27875-4, ISBN 978-3-642-27874-7, MR 2920058.
  4. ^ Damaschke, Peter (1990), "Induced subgraphs and well-quasi-ordering", Journal of Graph Theory, 14 (4): 427–435, doi:10.1002/jgt.3190140406, MR 1067237.
  5. ^ Schmidt, Diana (1979). Well-partial orderings and their maximal order types (Habilitationsschrift). Heidelberg. Republished in: Schmidt, Diana (2020). "Well-partial orderings and their maximal order types". In Schuster, Peter M.; Seisenberger, Monika; Weiermann, Andreas (eds.). Well-Quasi Orders in Computation, Logic, Language and Reasoning. Trends in Logic. Vol. 53. Springer. pp. 351–391. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-30229-0_13.
  6. ^ Rathjen, Michael; Weiermann, Andreas (1993). "Proof-theoretic investigations on Kruskal's theorem". Annals of Pure and Applied Logic. 60: 49–88. doi:10.1016/0168-0072(93)90192-G.
  7. ^ Forster, Thomas (2003). "Better-quasi-orderings and coinduction". Theoretical Computer Science. 309 (1–3): 111–123. doi:10.1016/S0304-3975(03)00131-2.
  • Dickson, L. E. (1913). "Finiteness of the odd perfect and primitive abundant numbers with r distinct prime factors". American Journal of Mathematics. 35 (4): 413–422. doi:10.2307/2370405. JSTOR 2370405.
  • Higman, G. (1952). "Ordering by divisibility in abstract algebras". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. 2: 326–336. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-2.1.326.
  • Kruskal, J. B. (1972). "The theory of well-quasi-ordering: A frequently discovered concept". Journal of Combinatorial Theory. Series A. 13 (3): 297–305. doi:10.1016/0097-3165(72)90063-5.
  • Ketonen, Jussi (1978). "The structure of countable Boolean algebras". Annals of Mathematics. 108 (1): 41–89. doi:10.2307/1970929. JSTOR 1970929.
  • Milner, E. C. (1985). "Basic WQO- and BQO-theory". In Rival, I. (ed.). Graphs and Order. The Role of Graphs in the Theory of Ordered Sets and Its Applications. D. Reidel Publishing Co. pp. 487–502. ISBN 90-277-1943-8.
  • Gallier, Jean H. (1991). "What's so special about Kruskal's theorem and the ordinal Γo? A survey of some results in proof theory". Annals of Pure and Applied Logic. 53 (3): 199–260. doi:10.1016/0168-0072(91)90022-E.

well, quasi, ordering, transitive, binary, relations, vtesymmetricantisymmetricconnectedwell, foundedhas, joinshas, meetsreflexiveirreflexiveasymmetrictotal, semiconnexanti, reflexiveequivalence, relationy, preorder, quasiorder, partial, order, total, preorder. Transitive binary relations vteSymmetricAntisymmetricConnectedWell foundedHas joinsHas meetsReflexiveIrreflexiveAsymmetricTotal SemiconnexAnti reflexiveEquivalence relationY Y Preorder Quasiorder Y Partial order Y Y Total preorder Y Y Total order YY Y Prewellordering YY Y Well quasi ordering Y Y Well ordering YYY Y Lattice Y YYY Join semilattice Y Y Y Meet semilattice Y YY Strict partial order Y YYStrict weak order Y YYStrict total order YY YYSymmetricAntisymmetricConnectedWell foundedHas joinsHas meetsReflexiveIrreflexiveAsymmetricDefinitions for all a b displaystyle a b and S displaystyle S neq varnothing aRb bRa displaystyle begin aligned amp aRb Rightarrow amp bRa end aligned aRb and bRa a b displaystyle begin aligned aRb text and amp bRa Rightarrow a amp b end aligned a b aRb or bRa displaystyle begin aligned a neq amp b Rightarrow aRb text or amp bRa end aligned minSexists displaystyle begin aligned min S text exists end aligned a bexists displaystyle begin aligned a vee b text exists end aligned a bexists displaystyle begin aligned a wedge b text exists end aligned aRa displaystyle aRa not aRa displaystyle text not aRa aRb not bRa displaystyle begin aligned aRb Rightarrow text not bRa end aligned Y indicates that the column s property is always true the row s term at the very left while indicates that the property is not guaranteed in general it might or might not hold For example that every equivalence relation is symmetric but not necessarily antisymmetric is indicated by Y in the Symmetric column and in the Antisymmetric column respectively All definitions tacitly require the homogeneous relation R displaystyle R be transitive for all a b c displaystyle a b c if aRb displaystyle aRb and bRc displaystyle bRc then aRc displaystyle aRc A term s definition may require additional properties that are not listed in this table In mathematics specifically order theory a well quasi ordering or wqo on a set X displaystyle X is a quasi ordering of X displaystyle X for which every infinite sequence of elements x0 x1 x2 displaystyle x 0 x 1 x 2 ldots from X displaystyle X contains an increasing pair xi xj displaystyle x i leq x j with i lt j displaystyle i lt j Contents 1 Motivation 2 Formal definition 3 Ordinal type 4 Examples 5 Constructing new wpo s from given ones 6 Wqo s versus well partial orders 7 Infinite increasing subsequences 8 Properties of wqos 9 See also 10 Notes 11 ReferencesMotivation editWell founded induction can be used on any set with a well founded relation thus one is interested in when a quasi order is well founded Here by abuse of terminology a quasiorder displaystyle leq nbsp is said to be well founded if the corresponding strict order x y y x displaystyle x leq y land y nleq x nbsp is a well founded relation However the class of well founded quasiorders is not closed under certain operations that is when a quasi order is used to obtain a new quasi order on a set of structures derived from our original set this quasiorder is found to be not well founded By placing stronger restrictions on the original well founded quasiordering one can hope to ensure that our derived quasiorderings are still well founded An example of this is the power set operation Given a quasiordering displaystyle leq nbsp for a set X displaystyle X nbsp one can define a quasiorder displaystyle leq nbsp on X displaystyle X nbsp s power set P X displaystyle P X nbsp by setting A B displaystyle A leq B nbsp if and only if for each element of A displaystyle A nbsp one can find some element of B displaystyle B nbsp that is larger than it with respect to displaystyle leq nbsp One can show that this quasiordering on P X displaystyle P X nbsp needn t be well founded but if one takes the original quasi ordering to be a well quasi ordering then it is Formal definition editA well quasi ordering on a set X displaystyle X nbsp is a quasi ordering i e a reflexive transitive binary relation such that any infinite sequence of elements x0 x1 x2 displaystyle x 0 x 1 x 2 ldots nbsp from X displaystyle X nbsp contains an increasing pair xi xj displaystyle x i leq x j nbsp with i lt j displaystyle i lt j nbsp The set X displaystyle X nbsp is said to be well quasi ordered or shortly wqo A well partial order or a wpo is a wqo that is a proper ordering relation i e it is antisymmetric Among other ways of defining wqo s one is to say that they are quasi orderings which do not contain infinite strictly decreasing sequences of the form x0 gt x1 gt x2 gt displaystyle x 0 gt x 1 gt x 2 gt cdots nbsp 1 nor infinite sequences of pairwise incomparable elements Hence a quasi order X is wqo if and only if X lt is well founded and has no infinite antichains Ordinal type editLet X displaystyle X nbsp be well partially ordered A necessarily finite sequence x1 x2 xn displaystyle x 1 x 2 ldots x n nbsp of elements of X displaystyle X nbsp that contains no pair xi xj displaystyle x i leq x j nbsp with i lt j displaystyle i lt j nbsp is usually called a bad sequence The tree of bad sequences TX displaystyle T X nbsp is the tree that contains a vertex for each bad sequence and an edge joining each nonempty bad sequence x1 xn 1 xn displaystyle x 1 ldots x n 1 x n nbsp to its parent x1 xn 1 displaystyle x 1 ldots x n 1 nbsp The root of TX displaystyle T X nbsp corresponds to the empty sequence Since X displaystyle X nbsp contains no infinite bad sequence the tree TX displaystyle T X nbsp contains no infinite path starting at the root citation needed Therefore each vertex v displaystyle v nbsp of TX displaystyle T X nbsp has an ordinal height o v displaystyle o v nbsp which is defined by transfinite induction as o v limw child of v o w 1 displaystyle o v lim w mathrm child of v o w 1 nbsp The ordinal type of X displaystyle X nbsp denoted o X displaystyle o X nbsp is the ordinal height of the root of TX displaystyle T X nbsp A linearization of X displaystyle X nbsp is an extension of the partial order into a total order It is easy to verify that o X displaystyle o X nbsp is an upper bound on the ordinal type of every linearization of X displaystyle X nbsp De Jongh and Parikh 1 proved that in fact there always exists a linearization of X displaystyle X nbsp that achieves the maximal ordinal type o X displaystyle o X nbsp Examples edit nbsp Pic 1 Integer numbers with the usual order nbsp Pic 2 Hasse diagram of the natural numbers ordered by divisibility nbsp Pic 3 Hasse diagram of N2 displaystyle mathbb N 2 nbsp with componentwise order N displaystyle mathbb N leq nbsp the set of natural numbers with standard ordering is a well partial order in fact a well order However Z displaystyle mathbb Z leq nbsp the set of positive and negative integers is not a well quasi order because it is not well founded see Pic 1 N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp the set of natural numbers ordered by divisibility is not a well quasi order the prime numbers are an infinite antichain see Pic 2 Nk displaystyle mathbb N k leq nbsp the set of vectors of k displaystyle k nbsp natural numbers where k displaystyle k nbsp is finite with component wise ordering is a well partial order Dickson s lemma see Pic 3 More generally if X displaystyle X leq nbsp is well quasi order then Xk k displaystyle X k leq k nbsp is also a well quasi order for all k displaystyle k nbsp Let X displaystyle X nbsp be an arbitrary finite set with at least two elements The set X displaystyle X nbsp of words over X displaystyle X nbsp ordered lexicographically as in a dictionary is not a well quasi order because it contains the infinite decreasing sequence b ab aab aaab displaystyle b ab aab aaab ldots nbsp Similarly X displaystyle X nbsp ordered by the prefix relation is not a well quasi order because the previous sequence is an infinite antichain of this partial order However X displaystyle X nbsp ordered by the subsequence relation is a well partial order 2 If X displaystyle X nbsp has only one element these three partial orders are identical More generally X displaystyle X leq nbsp the set of finite X displaystyle X nbsp sequences ordered by embedding is a well quasi order if and only if X displaystyle X leq nbsp is a well quasi order Higman s lemma Recall that one embeds a sequence u displaystyle u nbsp into a sequence v displaystyle v nbsp by finding a subsequence of v displaystyle v nbsp that has the same length as u displaystyle u nbsp and that dominates it term by term When X displaystyle X nbsp is an unordered set u v displaystyle u leq v nbsp if and only if u displaystyle u nbsp is a subsequence of v displaystyle v nbsp Xw displaystyle X omega leq nbsp the set of infinite sequences over a well quasi order X displaystyle X leq nbsp ordered by embedding is not a well quasi order in general That is Higman s lemma does not carry over to infinite sequences Better quasi orderings have been introduced to generalize Higman s lemma to sequences of arbitrary lengths Embedding between finite trees with nodes labeled by elements of a wqo X displaystyle X leq nbsp is a wqo Kruskal s tree theorem Embedding between infinite trees with nodes labeled by elements of a wqo X displaystyle X leq nbsp is a wqo Nash Williams theorem Embedding between countable scattered linear order types is a well quasi order Laver s theorem Embedding between countable boolean algebras is a well quasi order This follows from Laver s theorem and a theorem of Ketonen Finite graphs ordered by a notion of embedding called graph minor is a well quasi order Robertson Seymour theorem Graphs of finite tree depth ordered by the induced subgraph relation form a well quasi order 3 as do the cographs ordered by induced subgraphs 4 Constructing new wpo s from given ones editLet X1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp and X2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp be two disjoint wpo sets Let Y X1 X2 displaystyle Y X 1 cup X 2 nbsp and define a partial order on Y displaystyle Y nbsp by letting y1 Yy2 displaystyle y 1 leq Y y 2 nbsp if and only if y1 y2 Xi displaystyle y 1 y 2 in X i nbsp for the same i 1 2 displaystyle i in 1 2 nbsp and y1 Xiy2 displaystyle y 1 leq X i y 2 nbsp Then Y displaystyle Y nbsp is wpo and o Y o X1 o X2 displaystyle o Y o X 1 oplus o X 2 nbsp where displaystyle oplus nbsp denotes natural sum of ordinals 1 Given wpo sets X1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp and X2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp define a partial order on the Cartesian product Y X1 X2 displaystyle Y X 1 times X 2 nbsp by letting a1 a2 Y b1 b2 displaystyle a 1 a 2 leq Y b 1 b 2 nbsp if and only if a1 X1b1 displaystyle a 1 leq X 1 b 1 nbsp and a2 X2b2 displaystyle a 2 leq X 2 b 2 nbsp Then Y displaystyle Y nbsp is wpo this is a generalization of Dickson s lemma and o Y o X1 o X2 displaystyle o Y o X 1 otimes o X 2 nbsp where displaystyle otimes nbsp denotes natural product of ordinals 1 Given a wpo set X displaystyle X nbsp let X displaystyle X nbsp be the set of finite sequences of elements of X displaystyle X nbsp partially ordered by the subsequence relation Meaning let x1 xn X y1 ym displaystyle x 1 ldots x n leq X y 1 ldots y m nbsp if and only if there exist indices 1 i1 lt lt in m displaystyle 1 leq i 1 lt cdots lt i n leq m nbsp such that xj Xyij displaystyle x j leq X y i j nbsp for each 1 j n displaystyle 1 leq j leq n nbsp By Higman s lemma X displaystyle X nbsp is wpo The ordinal type of X displaystyle X nbsp is 1 5 o X wwo X 1 o X finite wwo X 1 o X ea n for some a and some finite n wwo X otherwise displaystyle o X begin cases omega omega o X 1 amp o X text finite omega omega o X 1 amp o X varepsilon alpha n text for some alpha text and some finite n omega omega o X amp text otherwise end cases nbsp Given a wpo set X displaystyle X nbsp let T X displaystyle T X nbsp be the set of all finite rooted trees whose vertices are labeled by elements of X displaystyle X nbsp Partially order T X displaystyle T X nbsp by the tree embedding relation By Kruskal s tree theorem T X displaystyle T X nbsp is wpo This result is nontrivial even for the case X 1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp which corresponds to unlabeled trees in which case o T X displaystyle o T X nbsp equals the small Veblen ordinal In general for o X displaystyle o X nbsp countable we have the upper bound o T X ϑ Wwo X displaystyle o T X leq vartheta Omega omega o X nbsp in terms of the ϑ displaystyle vartheta nbsp ordinal collapsing function The small Veblen ordinal equals ϑ Ww displaystyle vartheta Omega omega nbsp in this ordinal notation 6 Wqo s versus well partial orders editIn practice the wqo s one manipulates are quite often not orderings see examples above and the theory is technically smoother citation needed if we do not require antisymmetry so it is built with wqo s as the basic notion On the other hand according to Milner 1985 no real gain in generality is obtained by considering quasi orders rather than partial orders it is simply more convenient to do so Observe that a wpo is a wqo and that a wqo gives rise to a wpo between equivalence classes induced by the kernel of the wqo For example if we order Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp by divisibility we end up with n m displaystyle n equiv m nbsp if and only if n m displaystyle n pm m nbsp so that Z N displaystyle mathbb Z approx mathbb N nbsp Infinite increasing subsequences editIf X displaystyle X leq nbsp is wqo then every infinite sequence x0 x1 x2 displaystyle x 0 x 1 x 2 ldots nbsp contains an infinite increasing subsequence xn0 xn1 xn2 displaystyle x n 0 leq x n 1 leq x n 2 leq cdots nbsp with n0 lt n1 lt n2 lt displaystyle n 0 lt n 1 lt n 2 lt cdots nbsp Such a subsequence is sometimes called perfect This can be proved by a Ramsey argument given some sequence xi i displaystyle x i i nbsp consider the set I displaystyle I nbsp of indexes i displaystyle i nbsp such that xi displaystyle x i nbsp has no larger or equal xj displaystyle x j nbsp to its right i e with i lt j displaystyle i lt j nbsp If I displaystyle I nbsp is infinite then the I displaystyle I nbsp extracted subsequence contradicts the assumption that X displaystyle X nbsp is wqo So I displaystyle I nbsp is finite and any xn displaystyle x n nbsp with n displaystyle n nbsp larger than any index in I displaystyle I nbsp can be used as the starting point of an infinite increasing subsequence The existence of such infinite increasing subsequences is sometimes taken as a definition for well quasi ordering leading to an equivalent notion Properties of wqos editGiven a quasiordering X displaystyle X leq nbsp the quasiordering P X displaystyle P X leq nbsp defined by A B a A b B a b displaystyle A leq B iff forall a in A exists b in B a leq b nbsp is well founded if and only if X displaystyle X leq nbsp is a wqo 7 A quasiordering is a wqo if and only if the corresponding partial order obtained by quotienting by x y x y y x displaystyle x sim y iff x leq y land y leq x nbsp has no infinite descending sequences or antichains This can be proved using a Ramsey argument as above Given a well quasi ordering X displaystyle X leq nbsp any sequence of upward closed subsets S0 S1 X displaystyle S 0 subseteq S 1 subseteq cdots subseteq X nbsp eventually stabilises meaning there exists n N displaystyle n in mathbb N nbsp such that Sn Sn 1 displaystyle S n S n 1 cdots nbsp a subset S X displaystyle S subseteq X nbsp is called upward closed if x y X x y x S y S displaystyle forall x y in X x leq y wedge x in S Rightarrow y in S nbsp assuming the contrary i N j N j gt i x Sj Si displaystyle forall i in mathbb N exists j in mathbb N j gt i exists x in S j setminus S i nbsp a contradiction is reached by extracting an infinite non ascending subsequence Given a well quasi ordering X displaystyle X leq nbsp any subset S displaystyle S nbsp of X displaystyle X nbsp has a finite number of minimal elements with respect to displaystyle leq nbsp for otherwise the minimal elements of S displaystyle S nbsp would constitute an infinite antichain See also editBetter quasi ordering mathematical relationPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Prewellordering Set theory concept Well order Class of mathematical orderingsNotes edit Here x lt y means x y displaystyle x leq y nbsp and y x displaystyle y nleq x nbsp References edit a b c d de Jongh Dick H G Parikh Rohit 1977 Well partial orderings and hierarchies Indagationes Mathematicae Proceedings 80 3 195 207 doi 10 1016 1385 7258 77 90067 1 Gasarch W 1998 A survey of recursive combinatorics Handbook of Recursive Mathematics Vol 2 Stud Logic Found Math vol 139 Amsterdam North Holland pp 1041 1176 doi 10 1016 S0049 237X 98 80049 9 MR 1673598 See in particular page 1160 Nesetril Jaroslav Ossona de Mendez Patrice 2012 Lemma 6 13 Sparsity Graphs Structures and Algorithms Algorithms and Combinatorics vol 28 Heidelberg Springer p 137 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 27875 4 ISBN 978 3 642 27874 7 MR 2920058 Damaschke Peter 1990 Induced subgraphs and well quasi ordering Journal of Graph Theory 14 4 427 435 doi 10 1002 jgt 3190140406 MR 1067237 Schmidt Diana 1979 Well partial orderings and their maximal order types Habilitationsschrift Heidelberg Republished in Schmidt Diana 2020 Well partial orderings and their maximal order types In Schuster Peter M Seisenberger Monika Weiermann Andreas eds Well Quasi Orders in Computation Logic Language and Reasoning Trends in Logic Vol 53 Springer pp 351 391 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 30229 0 13 Rathjen Michael Weiermann Andreas 1993 Proof theoretic investigations on Kruskal s theorem Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 60 49 88 doi 10 1016 0168 0072 93 90192 G Forster Thomas 2003 Better quasi orderings and coinduction Theoretical Computer Science 309 1 3 111 123 doi 10 1016 S0304 3975 03 00131 2 Dickson L E 1913 Finiteness of the odd perfect and primitive abundant numbers with r distinct prime factors American Journal of Mathematics 35 4 413 422 doi 10 2307 2370405 JSTOR 2370405 Higman G 1952 Ordering by divisibility in abstract algebras Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society 2 326 336 doi 10 1112 plms s3 2 1 326 Kruskal J B 1972 The theory of well quasi ordering A frequently discovered concept Journal of Combinatorial Theory Series A 13 3 297 305 doi 10 1016 0097 3165 72 90063 5 Ketonen Jussi 1978 The structure of countable Boolean algebras Annals of Mathematics 108 1 41 89 doi 10 2307 1970929 JSTOR 1970929 Milner E C 1985 Basic WQO and BQO theory In Rival I ed Graphs and Order The Role of Graphs in the Theory of Ordered Sets and Its Applications D Reidel Publishing Co pp 487 502 ISBN 90 277 1943 8 Gallier Jean H 1991 What s so special about Kruskal s theorem and the ordinal Go A survey of some results in proof theory Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 53 3 199 260 doi 10 1016 0168 0072 91 90022 E Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Well quasi ordering amp oldid 1210802036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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