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combinatorics Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and as an end to obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many ...
, a Sperner family (or Sperner system; named in honor of
Emanuel Sperner Emanuel Sperner (9 December 1905 – 31 January 1980) was a German mathematician, best known for two theorems. He was born in Waltdorf (near Neiße, Upper Silesia, now Nysa, Poland), and died in Sulzburg-Laufen, West Germany. He was a student a ...
), or clutter, is a family ''F'' of subsets of a finite set ''E'' in which none of the sets contains another. Equivalently, a Sperner family is an antichain in the inclusion lattice over the
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 po ...
of ''E''. A Sperner family is also sometimes called an independent system or irredundant set. Sperner families are counted by the Dedekind numbers, and their size is bounded by Sperner's theorem and the Lubell–Yamamoto–Meshalkin inequality. They may also be described in the language of
hypergraph In mathematics, a hypergraph is a generalization of a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph in which an graph theory, edge can join any number of vertex (graph theory), vertices. In contrast, in an ordinary graph, an edge connects exactly two vert ...
s rather than set families, where they are called clutters.


Dedekind numbers

The number of different Sperner families on a set of ''n'' elements is counted by the Dedekind numbers, the first few of which are :2, 3, 6, 20, 168, 7581, 7828354, 2414682040998, 56130437228687557907788 . Although accurate
asymptotic In analytic geometry, an asymptote () of a curve is a line such that the distance between the curve and the line approaches zero as one or both of the ''x'' or ''y'' coordinates Limit of a function#Limits at infinity, tends to infinity. In pro ...
estimates are known for larger values of ''n'', it is unknown whether there exists an exact formula that can be used to compute these numbers efficiently. The collection of all Sperner families on a set of ''n'' elements can be organized as a free distributive lattice, in which the join of two Sperner families is obtained from the union of the two families by removing sets that are a superset of another set in the union.


Bounds on the size of a Sperner family


Sperner's theorem

The ''k''-element subsets of an ''n''-element set form a Sperner family, the size of which is maximized when ''k'' = ''n''/2 (or the nearest integer to it). Sperner's theorem states that these families are the largest possible Sperner families over an ''n''-element set. Formally, the theorem states that, for every Sperner family ''S'' over an ''n''-element set, :, S, \le \binom.


LYM inequality

The Lubell–Yamamoto–Meshalkin inequality provides another bound on the size of a Sperner family, and can be used to prove Sperner's theorem. It states that, if ''ak'' denotes the number of sets of size ''k'' in a Sperner family over a set of ''n'' elements, then : \sum_^n\frac \le 1.


Clutters

A clutter is a family of subsets of a finite set such that none contains any other; that is, it is a Sperner family. The difference is in the questions typically asked. Clutters are an important structure in the study of combinatorial optimization. In more complicated language, a clutter is a
hypergraph In mathematics, a hypergraph is a generalization of a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph in which an graph theory, edge can join any number of vertex (graph theory), vertices. In contrast, in an ordinary graph, an edge connects exactly two vert ...
(V,E) with the added property that A \not\subseteq B whenever A,B \in E and A \neq B (i.e. no edge properly contains another). An opposite notion to a clutter is an
abstract simplicial complex In combinatorics, an abstract simplicial complex (ASC), often called an abstract complex or just a complex, is a family of sets that is closed under taking subsets, i.e., every subset of a set in the family is also in the family. It is a purely c ...
, where every subset of an edge is contained in the hypergraph; this is an
order ideal In mathematical order theory, an ideal is a special subset of a partially ordered set (poset). Although this term historically was derived from the notion of a ring ideal of abstract algebra, it has subsequently been generalized to a different no ...
in the poset of subsets of ''V''. If H = (V,E) is a clutter, then the blocker of ''H'', denoted by b(H), is the clutter with vertex set ''V'' and edge set consisting of all minimal sets B \subseteq V so that B \cap A \neq \varnothing for every A \in E. It can be shown that b(b(H)) = H , so blockers give us a type of duality. We define \nu(H) to be the size of the largest collection of disjoint edges in ''H'' and \tau(H) to be the size of the smallest edge in b(H). It is easy to see that \nu(H) \le \tau(H).


Examples

# If ''G'' is a simple loopless graph, then H = (V(G),E(G)) is a clutter (if edges are treated as unordered pairs of vertices) and b(H) is the collection of all minimal vertex covers. Here \nu(H) is the size of the largest matching and \tau(H) is the size of the smallest vertex cover. Kőnig's theorem states that, for
bipartite graph In the mathematics, mathematical field of graph theory, a bipartite graph (or bigraph) is a Graph (discrete mathematics), graph whose vertex (graph theory), vertices can be divided into two disjoint sets, disjoint and Independent set (graph theo ...
s, \nu(H) = \tau(H). However for other graphs these two quantities may differ. # Let ''G'' be a graph and let s,t \in V(G). The collection ''H'' of all edge-sets of ''s''-''t'' paths is a clutter and b(H) is the collection of all minimal edge cuts which separate ''s'' and ''t''. In this case \nu(H) is the maximum number of edge-disjoint ''s''-''t'' paths, and \tau(H) is the size of the smallest edge-cut separating ''s'' and ''t'', so Menger's theorem (edge-connectivity version) asserts that \nu(H) = \tau(H). # Let ''G'' be a connected graph and let ''H'' be the clutter on E(G) consisting of all edge sets of spanning trees of ''G''. Then b(H) is the collection of all minimal edge cutsets in ''G''.


Minors

There is a minor relation on clutters which is similar to the minor relation on graphs. If H = (V,E) is a clutter and v \in V, then we may delete ''v'' to get the clutter H \setminus v with vertex set V \setminus \ and edge set consisting of all A \in E which do not contain ''v''. We contract ''v'' to get the clutter H / v = b(b(H) \setminus v). These two operations commute, and if ''J'' is another clutter, we say that ''J'' is a minor of ''H'' if a clutter isomorphic to ''J'' may be obtained from ''H'' by a sequence of deletions and contractions.


References

*. *. *. *{{citation , last = Sperner , first = Emanuel , authorlink = Emanuel Sperner , title = Ein Satz über Untermengen einer endlichen Menge , journal = Mathematische Zeitschrift , volume = 27 , issue = 1 , year = 1928 , doi = 10.1007/BF01171114 , language = German , pages = 544–548 , jfm=54.0090.06 , url = http://dml.cz/bitstream/handle/10338.dmlcz/127405/CzechMathJ_48-1998-1_12.pdf. Families of sets