Infimum
Encyclopedia : I : IN : INF : Infimum
In mathematics the infimum of a subset of some set is the greatest element, not necessarily in the subset, that is smaller than all other elements of the subset. Consequently the term greatest lower bound (also abbreviated as glb or GLB) is also commonly used. Infima of real numbers are a common special case that is especially important in analysis. However, the general definition remains valid in the more abstract setting of order theory where arbitrary partially ordered sets are considered.
Infima are in a precise sense dual to the concept of a supremum and thus additional information and examples are found in that article.
Infima of real numbers
In analysis the infimum or greatest lower bound of a set S of real numbers is denoted by inf(S) and is defined to be the biggest real number that is smaller than or equal to every number in S. If no such number exists (because S is not bounded below), then we define inf(S) = −∞. If S is empty, we define inf(S) = ∞ (see extended real number line).
An important property of the real numbers is that every set of real numbers has an infimum (any bounded nonempty subset of the real numbers has an infimum in the non-extended real numbers).
Examples:
- [\inf \ = 1.]
- [\inf \ : 0 < x < 1 \} = 0.]
- [\inf \ : x^3 > 2 \} = 2^.]
- [\inf \ = -1.]
The notions of infimum and supremum are dual in the sense that
- [\inf(S) = -\sup(-S)].
See also: limit inferior.
Infima in partially ordered sets
The definition of infima easily generalizes to subsets of arbitrary partially ordered sets and as such plays a vital role in order theory. In this context, especially in lattice theory, greatest lower bounds are also called meets.
Formally, the infimum of a subset S of a partially ordered set (P, ≤) is an element l of P such that
- l ≤ x for all x in S, and
- for any p in P such that p ≤ x for all x in S it holds that p ≤ l.
The dual concept of infimum is given by the notion of a supremum or least upper bound. By the duality principle of order theory, every statement about suprema is thus readily transformed into a statement about infima. For this reason, all further results, details, and examples can be taken from the article on suprema.
Least upper bound property
See the article on the least upper bound property.
See also
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
