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Sperner's theorem, in
discrete mathematics Discrete mathematics is the study of mathematical structures that can be considered "discrete" (in a way analogous to discrete variables, having a bijection with the set of natural numbers) rather than "continuous" (analogously to continu ...
, describes the largest possible families of
finite set In mathematics, particularly set theory, a finite set is a set that has a finite number of elements. Informally, a finite set is a set which one could in principle count and finish counting. For example, :\ is a finite set with five elements. ...
s none of which contain any other sets in the family. It is one of the central results in
extremal set theory Extremal combinatorics is a field of combinatorics, which is itself a part of mathematics. Extremal combinatorics studies how large or how small a collection of finite objects (numbers, graphs, vectors, sets, etc.) can be, if it has to satisfy cert ...
. It is named after Emanuel Sperner, who published it in 1928. This result is sometimes called Sperner's lemma, but the name "
Sperner's lemma In mathematics, Sperner's lemma is a combinatorial result on colorings of triangulations, analogous to the Brouwer fixed point theorem, which is equivalent to it. It states that every Sperner coloring (described below) of a triangulation of an ...
" also refers to an unrelated result on coloring triangulations. To differentiate the two results, the result on the size of a Sperner family is now more commonly known as Sperner's theorem.


Statement

A
family of sets In set theory and related branches of mathematics, a collection F of subsets of a given set S is called a family of subsets of S, or a family of sets over S. More generally, a collection of any sets whatsoever is called a family of sets, set fa ...
in which none of the sets is a strict subset of another is called a Sperner family, or an
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 w ...
of sets, or a clutter. For example, the family of ''k''-element subsets of an ''n''-element set is a Sperner family. No set in this family can contain any of the others, because a containing set has to be strictly bigger than the set it contains, and in this family all sets have equal size. The value of ''k'' that makes this example have as many sets as possible is ''n''/2 if ''n'' is even, or either of the nearest integers to ''n''/2 if ''n'' is odd. For this choice, the number of sets in the family is \tbinom. Sperner's theorem states that these examples are the largest possible Sperner families over an ''n''-element set. Formally, the theorem states that, #for every Sperner family ''S'' whose union has a total of ''n'' elements, , S, \le \binom, and #equality holds if and only if ''S'' consists of all subsets of an ''n''-element set that have size \lfloor n/2\rfloor or all that have size \lceil n/2\rceil.


Partial orders

Sperner's theorem can also be stated in terms of
partial order width In mathematics, in the areas of order theory and combinatorics, Dilworth's theorem characterizes the width of any finite partially ordered set in terms of a partition of the order into a minimum number of chains. It is named for the mathematician . ...
. The family of all subsets of an ''n''-element set (its
power set In mathematics, the power set (or powerset) of a set is the set of all subsets of , including the empty set and itself. In axiomatic set theory (as developed, for example, in the ZFC axioms), the existence of the power set of any set is ...
) can be partially ordered by set inclusion; in this partial order, two distinct elements are said to be incomparable when neither of them contains the other. The width of a partial order is the largest number of elements in an
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 w ...
, a set of pairwise incomparable elements. Translating this terminology into the language of sets, an antichain is just a Sperner family, and the width of the partial order is the maximum number of sets in a Sperner family. Thus, another way of stating Sperner's theorem is that the width of the inclusion order on a power set is \binom. A graded
partially ordered set In mathematics, especially order theory, a partially ordered set (also poset) formalizes and generalizes the intuitive concept of an ordering, sequencing, or arrangement of the elements of a set. A poset consists of a set together with a binar ...
is said to have the Sperner property when one of its largest antichains is formed by a set of elements that all have the same rank. In this terminology, Sperner's theorem states that the partially ordered set of all subsets of a finite set, partially ordered by set inclusion, has the Sperner property.


Proof

There are many proofs of Sperner's theorem, each leading to different generalizations (see ). The following proof is due to . Let ''sk'' denote the number of ''k''-sets in ''S''. For all 0 ≤ ''k'' ≤ ''n'', : \ge and, thus, : \le . Since ''S'' is an antichain, we can sum over the above inequality from ''k'' = 0 to ''n'' and then apply the LYM inequality to obtain :\sum_^n \le \sum_^n \le 1, which means : , S, = \sum_^n s_k \le . This completes the proof of part 1. To have equality, all the inequalities in the preceding proof must be equalities. Since : = if and only if k = \lfloor\rfloor or \lceil\rceil, we conclude that equality implies that ''S'' consists only of sets of sizes \lfloor\rfloor or \lceil\rceil. For even ''n'' that concludes the proof of part 2. For odd ''n'' there is more work to do, which we omit here because it is complicated. See , pp. 3–4.


Generalizations

There are several generalizations of Sperner's theorem for subsets of \mathcal P(E), the poset of all subsets of ''E''.


No long chains

A chain is a subfamily \ \subseteq \mathcal P(E) that is totally ordered, i.e., S_0 \subset S_1\subset \dots\subset S_r (possibly after renumbering). The chain has ''r'' + 1 members and length ''r''. An ''r''-chain-free family (also called an ''r''-family) is a family of subsets of ''E'' that contains no chain of length ''r''. proved that the largest size of an ''r''-chain-free family is the sum of the ''r'' largest binomial coefficients \binom. The case ''r'' = 1 is Sperner's theorem.


''p''-compositions of a set

In the set \mathcal P(E)^p of ''p''-tuples of subsets of ''E'', we say a ''p''-tuple (S_1,\dots,S_p) is ≤ another one, (T_1,\dots,T_p), if S_i \subseteq T_i for each ''i'' = 1,2,...,''p''. We call (S_1,\dots,S_p) a ''p''-composition of ''E'' if the sets S_1,\dots,S_p form a partition of ''E''. proved that the maximum size of an antichain of ''p''-compositions is the largest ''p''-multinomial coefficient \binom, that is, the coefficient in which all ''n''''i'' are as nearly equal as possible (i.e., they differ by at most 1). Meshalkin proved this by proving a generalized LYM inequality. The case ''p'' = 2 is Sperner's theorem, because then S_2 = E \setminus S_1 and the assumptions reduce to the sets S_1 being a Sperner family.


No long chains in ''p''-compositions of a set

combined the Erdös and Meshalkin theorems by adapting Meshalkin's proof of his generalized LYM inequality. They showed that the largest size of a family of ''p''-compositions such that the sets in the ''i''-th position of the ''p''-tuples, ignoring duplications, are ''r''-chain-free, for every i = 1,2,\dots,p-1 (but not necessarily for ''i'' = ''p''), is not greater than the sum of the r^ largest ''p''-multinomial coefficients.


Projective geometry analog

In the finite projective geometry PG(''d'', ''F''''q'') of dimension ''d'' over a finite field of order ''q'', let \mathcal L(p,F_q) be the family of all subspaces. When partially ordered by set inclusion, this family is a lattice. proved that the largest size of an antichain in \mathcal L(p,F_q) is the largest
Gaussian coefficient In mathematics, the Gaussian binomial coefficients (also called Gaussian coefficients, Gaussian polynomials, or ''q''-binomial coefficients) are ''q''-analogs of the binomial coefficients. The Gaussian binomial coefficient, written as \binom nk ...
\begin d+1 \\ k\end; this is the projective-geometry analog, or ''q''-analog, of Sperner's theorem. They further proved that the largest size of an ''r''-chain-free family in \mathcal L(p,F_q) is the sum of the ''r'' largest Gaussian coefficients. Their proof is by a projective analog of the LYM inequality.


No long chains in ''p''-compositions of a projective space

obtained a Meshalkin-like generalization of the Rota–Harper theorem. In PG(''d'', ''F''''q''), a Meshalkin sequence of length ''p'' is a sequence (A_1,\ldots,A_p) of projective subspaces such that no proper subspace of PG(''d'', ''F''''q'') contains them all and their dimensions sum to d-p+1. The theorem is that a family of Meshalkin sequences of length ''p'' in PG(''d'', ''F''''q''), such that the subspaces appearing in position ''i'' of the sequences contain no chain of length ''r'' for each i = 1,2,\dots,p-1, is not more than the sum of the largest r^ of the quantities :\begin d+1 \\ n_1\ n_2\ \dots\ n_p \end q^, where \begin d+1 \\ n_1\ n_2\ \dots\ n_p \end (in which we assume that d+1 = n_1+\cdots+n_p) denotes the ''p''-Gaussian coefficient :\begin d+1 \\ n_1 \end \begin d+1-n_1 \\ n_2 \end \cdots \begin d+1-(n_1+\cdots+n_ )\\ n_p \end and :s_2(n_1,\ldots,n_p) := n_1n_2 + n_1n_3 + n_2n_3 + n_1n_4 + \cdots + n_n_p, the second
elementary symmetric function In mathematics, specifically in commutative algebra, the elementary symmetric polynomials are one type of basic building block for symmetric polynomials, in the sense that any symmetric polynomial can be expressed as a polynomial in elementary sym ...
of the numbers n_1, n_2, \dots, n_p.


See also

* Dilworth's theorem *
Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem In mathematics, the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem limits the number of sets in a family of sets for which every two sets have at least one element in common. Paul Erdős, Chao Ko, and Richard Rado proved the theorem in 1938, but did not publish ...


References

*. *. *. *. * * *. *. *. *{{citation , last = Sperner , first = Emanuel , authorlink = Emanuel Sperner , title = Ein Satz über Untermengen einer endlichen Menge , journal =
Mathematische Zeitschrift ''Mathematische Zeitschrift'' ( German for ''Mathematical Journal'') is a mathematical journal for pure and applied mathematics published by Springer Verlag. It was founded in 1918 and edited by Leon Lichtenstein together with Konrad Knopp, Erh ...
, volume = 27 , issue = 1 , year = 1928 , doi = 10.1007/BF01171114 , language = German , pages = 544–548 , jfm = 54.0090.06 , hdl = 10338.dmlcz/127405 , s2cid = 123451223 , hdl-access = free .


External links


Sperner's Theorem
at cut-the-knot
Sperner's theorem
on the polymath1 wiki Families of sets Factorial and binomial topics Articles containing proofs