Supersolvable Lattice
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In mathematics, a supersolvable lattice is a graded lattice that has a maximal
chain A chain is a serial assembly of connected pieces, called links, typically made of metal, with an overall character similar to that of a rope in that it is flexible and curved in compression but linear, rigid, and load-bearing in tension. A ...
of elements, each of which obeys a certain modularity relationship. The definition encapsulates many of the nice properties of lattices of subgroups of
supersolvable group In mathematics, a group is supersolvable (or supersoluble) if it has an invariant normal series where all the factors are cyclic groups. Supersolvability is stronger than the notion of solvability. Definition Let ''G'' be a group. ''G'' is sup ...
s.


Motivation

A finite
group A group is a number of persons or things that are located, gathered, or classed together. Groups of people * Cultural group, a group whose members share the same cultural identity * Ethnic group, a group whose members share the same ethnic iden ...
G is said to be ''supersolvable'' if it admits a maximal chain (or ''series'') of subgroups so that each subgroup in the chain is normal in G. A normal subgroup has been known since the 1940s to be left and (dual) right modular as an element of the lattice of subgroups. Richard Stanley noticed in the 1970s that certain
geometric lattice In the mathematics of matroids and lattices, a geometric lattice is a finite atomistic semimodular lattice, and a matroid lattice is an atomistic semimodular lattice without the assumption of finiteness. Geometric lattices and matroid lattices, ...
s, such as the partition lattice, obeyed similar properties, and gave a lattice-theoretic abstraction.


Definition

A finite graded lattice L is supersolvable if it admits a maximal chain \mathbf of elements (called an M-chain or chief chain) obeying any of the following equivalent properties. # For any chain \mathbf of elements, the smallest sublattice of L containing all the elements of \mathbf and \mathbf is distributive. This is the original condition of Stanley. # Every element of \mathbf is left modular. That is, for each m in \mathbf and each x \leq y in L, we have (x\vee m)\wedge y=x\vee(m\wedge y). # Every element of \mathbf is rank modular, in the following sense: if \rho is the rank function of L, then for each m in \mathbf and each x in L, we have \rho(m\wedge x)+\rho(m\vee x)=\rho(m)+\rho(x). For comparison, a finite lattice is geometric if and only if it is atomistic and the elements of the
antichain In mathematics, in the area of order theory, an antichain is a subset of a partially ordered set such that any two distinct elements in the subset are incomparable. The size of the largest antichain in a partially ordered set is known as its wid ...
of atoms are all left modular. An extension of the definition is that of a left modular lattice: a not-necessarily graded lattice with a maximal chain consisting of left modular elements. Thus, a left modular lattice requires the condition of (2), but relaxes the requirement of gradedness.


Examples

A group is supersolvable if and only if its lattice of subgroups is supersolvable. A chief series of subgroups forms a chief chain in the lattice of subgroups. The partition lattice of a finite set is supersolvable. A partition is left modular in this lattice if and only if it has at most one non- singleton part. The noncrossing partition lattice is similarly supersolvable, although it is not geometric. The lattice of flats of the
graphic matroid In the mathematical theory of Matroid theory, matroids, a graphic matroid (also called a cycle matroid or polygon matroid) is a matroid whose independent sets are the tree (graph theory), forests in a given finite undirected graph. The dual matr ...
for a
graph Graph may refer to: Mathematics *Graph (discrete mathematics), a structure made of vertices and edges **Graph theory, the study of such graphs and their properties *Graph (topology), a topological space resembling a graph in the sense of discret ...
is supersolvable if and only if the graph is chordal. Working from the top, the chief chain is obtained by removing vertices in a perfect elimination ordering one by one. Every
modular lattice In the branch of mathematics called order theory, a modular lattice is a lattice that satisfies the following self- dual condition, ;Modular law: implies where are arbitrary elements in the lattice,  ≤  is the partial order, and & ...
is supersolvable, as every element in such a lattice is left modular and rank modular.


Properties

A finite
matroid In combinatorics, a matroid is a structure that abstracts and generalizes the notion of linear independence in vector spaces. There are many equivalent ways to define a matroid Axiomatic system, axiomatically, the most significant being in terms ...
with a supersolvable lattice of flats (equivalently, a lattice that is both geometric and supersolvable) has a real-rooted
characteristic polynomial In linear algebra, the characteristic polynomial of a square matrix is a polynomial which is invariant under matrix similarity and has the eigenvalues as roots. It has the determinant and the trace of the matrix among its coefficients. The ...
. This is a consequence of a more general factorization theorem for characteristic polynomials over modular elements. The Orlik-Solomon algebra of an arrangement of hyperplanes with a supersolvable intersection lattice is a Koszul algebra. For more information, see Supersolvable arrangement. Any finite supersolvable lattice has an edge lexicographic labeling (or EL-labeling), hence its
order complex In mathematics, the poset topology associated to a poset (''S'', ≤) is the Alexandrov topology (open sets are upper sets) on the poset of finite chains of (''S'', ≤), ordered by inclusion. Let ''V'' be a set of vertices. An abstract simplicia ...
is shellable and Cohen-Macaulay. Indeed, supersolvable lattices can be characterized in terms of edge lexicographic labelings: a finite lattice of height n is supersolvable if and only if it has an edge lexicographic labeling that assigns to each maximal chain a permutation of \.


Notes


References

* * * * * * * * * * {{refend Lattice theory Solvable groups