Non-empty family of sets that is closed under finite unions and subsets
In the mathematical field of set theory, an ideal is a partially ordered collection of sets that are considered to be "small" or "negligible". Every subset of an element of the ideal must also be in the ideal (this codifies the idea that an ideal is a notion of smallness), and the union of any two elements of the ideal must also be in the ideal.
More formally, given a set
an ideal
on
is a nonempty subset of the powerset of
such that:
- if
and
then
and
- if
then ![{\displaystyle A\cup B\in I.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/3bcad002b66fd24599458e196271012b647ac73d)
Some authors add a fourth condition that
itself is not in
; ideals with this extra property are called proper ideals.
Ideals in the set-theoretic sense are exactly ideals in the order-theoretic sense, where the relevant order is set inclusion. Also, they are exactly ideals in the ring-theoretic sense on the Boolean ring formed by the powerset of the underlying set. The dual notion of an ideal is a filter.
Terminology
An element of an ideal
is said to be
-null or
-negligible, or simply null or negligible if the ideal
is understood from context. If
is an ideal on
then a subset of
is said to be
-positive (or just positive) if it is not an element of
The collection of all
-positive subsets of
is denoted
If
is a proper ideal on
and for every
either
or
then
is a prime ideal.
Examples of ideals
General examples
- For any set
and any arbitrarily chosen subset
the subsets of
form an ideal on
For finite
all ideals are of this form.
- The finite subsets of any set
form an ideal on ![{\displaystyle X.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/5ba76c5a460c4a0bb1639a193bc1830f0a773e03)
- For any measure space, subsets of sets of measure zero.
- For any measure space, sets of finite measure. This encompasses finite subsets (using counting measure) and small sets below.
- A bornology on a set
is an ideal that covers ![{\displaystyle X.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/5ba76c5a460c4a0bb1639a193bc1830f0a773e03)
- A non-empty family
of subsets of
is a proper ideal on
if and only if its dual in
which is denoted and defined by
is a proper filter on
(a filter is proper if it is not equal to
). The dual of the power set
is itself; that is,
Thus a non-empty family
is an ideal on
if and only if its dual
is a dual ideal on
(which by definition is either the power set
or else a proper filter on
).
Ideals on the natural numbers
- The ideal of all finite sets of natural numbers is denoted Fin.
- The summable ideal on the natural numbers, denoted
is the collection of all sets
of natural numbers such that the sum
is finite. See small set.
- The ideal of asymptotically zero-density sets on the natural numbers, denoted
is the collection of all sets
of natural numbers such that the fraction of natural numbers less than
that belong to
tends to zero as
tends to infinity. (That is, the asymptotic density of
is zero.)
Ideals on the real numbers
- The measure ideal is the collection of all sets
of real numbers such that the Lebesgue measure of
is zero.
- The meager ideal is the collection of all meager sets of real numbers.
Ideals on other sets
- If
is an ordinal number of uncountable cofinality, the nonstationary ideal on
is the collection of all subsets of
that are not stationary sets. This ideal has been studied extensively by W. Hugh Woodin.
Operations on ideals
Given ideals I and J on underlying sets X and Y respectively, one forms the skew or Fubini product
, an ideal on the Cartesian product
as follows: For any subset
That is, a set lies in the product ideal if only a negligible collection of x-coordinates correspond to a non-negligible slice of A in the y-direction. (Perhaps clearer: A set is positive in the product ideal if positively many x-coordinates correspond to positive slices.)
An ideal I on a set X induces an equivalence relation on
the powerset of X, considering A and B to be equivalent (for
subsets of X) if and only if the symmetric difference of A and B is an element of I. The quotient of
by this equivalence relation is a Boolean algebra, denoted
(read "P of X mod I").
To every ideal there is a corresponding filter, called its dual filter. If I is an ideal on X, then the dual filter of I is the collection of all sets
where A is an element of I. (Here
denotes the relative complement of A in X; that is, the collection of all elements of X that are not in A).
Relationships among ideals
If
and
are ideals on
and
respectively,
and
are Rudin–Keisler isomorphic if they are the same ideal except for renaming of the elements of their underlying sets (ignoring negligible sets). More formally, the requirement is that there be sets
and
elements of
and
respectively, and a bijection
such that for any subset
if and only if the image of
under
If
and
are Rudin–Keisler isomorphic, then
and
are isomorphic as Boolean algebras. Isomorphisms of quotient Boolean algebras induced by Rudin–Keisler isomorphisms of ideals are called trivial isomorphisms.
See also
- Bornology – Mathematical generalization of boundedness
- Filter (mathematics) – In mathematics, a special subset of a partially ordered set
- Filter (set theory) – Family of sets representing "large" sets
- Ideal (order theory) – Nonempty, upper-bounded, downward-closed subset
- Ideal (ring theory) – Additive subgroup of a mathematical ring that absorbs multiplication
- π-system – Family of sets closed under intersection
- σ-ideal – Family closed under subsets and countable unionsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets
References