Filter on a set

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Short description: Family of subsets representing "large" sets

In mathematics, a filter on a set is a family of subsets which is closed under supersets and finite intersections. The concept originates in topology, where the neighborhoods of a point form a filter on the space. Filters were introduced by Henri Cartan in 1937[1][2] and, as described in the article dedicated to filters in topology, they were subsequently used by Nicolas Bourbaki in their book Topologie Générale as an alternative to the related notion of a net developed in 1922 by E. H. Moore and Herman L. Smith. They have also found applications in model theory and set theory.

Filters on a set were later generalized to order filters. Specifically, a filter on a set X is a order filter on the power set of X ordered by inclusion.

The notion dual to a filter is an ideal. Ultrafilters are a particularly important subclass of filters.

Definition

Given a set X, a filter on X is a set of subsets of X such that:[3][4][5]

  • F is upwards-closed: If A,BX are such that A and AB then B,
  • F is closed under finite intersections: X,[lower-alpha 1], and if A and B then AB.

A proper (or non-degenerate) filter is a filter which is proper as a subset of the powerset 𝒫(X) (i.e., the only improper filter is 𝒫(X), consisting of all possible subsets). By upwards-closure, a filter is proper if and only if it does not contain the empty set.[4] Many authors adopt the convention that a filter must be proper by definition.[6][7][8][9]

When and 𝒢 are two filters on the same set such that 𝒢 holds, is said to be coarser[10] than 𝒢 (or a subfilter of 𝒢) while 𝒢 is said to be finer[10] than (or subordinate to or a superfilter[11] of ).

Examples

  • The singleton set ={X} is called the trivial or indiscrete filter on X.[12]
  • If Y is a subset of X, the subsets of X which are supersets of Y form a principal filter.[3]
  • If X is a topological space and xX, then the set of neighborhoods of x is a filter on X, the neighborhood filter[13] or vicinity filter[14] of x.
  • Many examples arise from various "largeness" conditions:
    • If X is a set, the set of all cofinite subsets of X (i.e., those sets whose complement in X is finite) is a filter on X, the Fréchet filter[12][15][5] (or cofinite filter[13]).
    • Similarly, if X is a set, the cocountable subsets of X (those whose complement is countable) form a filter, the cocountable filter[14] which is finer than the Fréchet filter. More generally, for any cardinal κ, the subsets whose complement has cardinal at most κ form a filter.
    • If X is a metric space, e.g., n, the co-bounded subsets of X (those whose complement is bounded set) form a filter on X.[16]
    • If X is a complete measure space (e.g., n with the Lebesgue measure), the conull subsets of X, i.e., the subsets whose complement has measure zero, form a filter on X. (For a non-complete measure space, one can take the subsets which, while not necessarily measurable, are contained in a measurable subset of measure zero.)
    • Similarly, if X is a measure space, the subsets whose complement is contained in a measurable subset of finite measure form a filter on X.
    • If X is a topological space, the comeager subsets of X, i.e., those whose complement is meager, form a filter on X.
    • The subsets of which have a natural density of 1 form a filter on .[17]
  • The club filter of a regular uncountable cardinal κ is the filter of all sets containing a club subset of κ.
  • If (i)iI is a family of filters on X and 𝒥 is a filter on I then A𝒥iAi is a filter on X called Kowalsky's filter.[18]

Principal and free filters

The kernel of a filter on X is the intersection of all the subsets of X in F.

A filter on X is principal[3] (or atomic[13]) when it has a particularly simple form: it contains exactly the supersets of Y, for some fixed subset YX. When Y=, this yields the improper filter. When Y={y} is a singleton, this filter (which consists of all subsets that contain y) is called the fundamental filter[3] (or discrete filter[19]) associated with y.

A filter is principal if and only if the kernel of is an element of , and when this is the case, consists of the supersets of its kernel.[20] On a finite set, every filter is principal (since the intersection defining the kernel is finite).

A filter is said to be free when it has empty kernel, otherwise it is fixed (and if x is an element of the kernel, it is fixed by x).[21] A filter on a set X is free if and only if it contains the Fréchet filter on X.[22]

Two filters 1 and 2 on X mesh when every member of 1 intersects every member of 2.[23] For every filter on X, there exists a unique pair of filters f (the free part of ) and p (the principal part of ) on X such that f is free, p is principal, fp=, and p does not mesh with f. The principal part p is the principal filter generated by the kernel of , and the free part f consists of elements of with any number of elements from the kernel possibly removed.[22]

A filter is countably deep if the kernel of any countable subset of belongs to .[14]

Correspondence with order filters

The concept of a filter on a set is a special case of the more general concept of a filter on a partially ordered set. By definition, a filter on a partially ordered set P is a subset F of P which is upwards-closed (if xF and xy then yF) and downwards-directed (every finite subset of F has a lower bound in F). A filter on a set X is the same as a filter on the powerset 𝒫(X) ordered by inclusion.[lower-alpha 2]

Constructions of filters

Intersection of filters

If (i)iI is a family of filters on X, its intersection iIi is a filter on X. The intersection is a greatest lower bound operation in the set of filters on X partially ordered by inclusion, which endows the filters on X with a complete lattice structure.[14][24]

The intersection iIi consists of the subsets which can be written as iIAi where Aii for each iI.

Filter generated by a family of subsets

Given a family of subsets 𝒮𝒫(X), there exists a minimum filter on X (in the sense of inclusion) which contains 𝒮. It can be constructed as the intersection (greatest lower bound) of all filters on X containing 𝒮. This filter 𝒮 is called the filter generated by 𝒮, and 𝒮 is said to be a filter subbase of 𝒮. [25]

The generated filter can also be described more explicitly: 𝒮 is obtained by closing 𝒮 under finite intersections, then upwards, i.e., 𝒮 consists of the subsets YX such that A0An1Y for some A0,,An1.[11]

Since these operations preserve the kernel, it follows that 𝒮 is a proper filter if and only if 𝒮 has the finite intersection property: the intersection of a finite subfamily of 𝒮 is non-empty.[16]

In the complete lattice of filters on X ordered by inclusion, the least upper bound of a family of filters (i)iI is the filter generated by iIi.[20]

Two filters 1 and 2 on X mesh if and only if 12 is proper.[23]

Filter bases

Let be a filter on X. A filter base of is a family of subsets 𝒫(X) such that is the upwards closure of , i.e., consists of those subsets YX for which AY for some A.[6]

This upwards closure is a filter if and only if is downwards-directed, i.e., is non-empty and for all A,B there exists C such that CAB.[6][13] When this is the case, is also called a prefilter, and the upwards closure is also equal to the generated filter .[16] Hence, being a filter base of is a stronger property than being a filter subbase of .

Examples

  • When X is a topological space and xX, a filter base of the neighborhood filter of x is known as a neighborhood base for x, and similarly, a filter subbase of the neighborhood filter of x is known as a neighborhood subbase for x. The open neighborhoods of x always form a neighborhood base for x, by definition of the neighborhood filter. In X=n, the closed balls of positive radius around x also form a neighborhood base for x.
  • Let X be an infinite set and let consist of the subsets of X which contain all points but one. Then is a filter subbase of the Fréchet filter on X, which consists of the cofinite subsets. Its closure under finite intersections is the entire Fréchet filter, but there are smaller bases of the Fréchet filter which contain the subbase , such as the one formed by the subsets of X which contain all points but a finite odd number. In fact, for every base of the Fréchet filter, removing any subset yields another base of the Fréchet filter.
  • If X is a topological space, the dense open subsets of X form a filter base on X, because they are closed under finite intersection. The filter they generate consists of the complements of nowhere dense subsets. On X=n, restricting to the null dense open subsets yields another filter base for the same filter.[citation needed]
  • Similarly, if X is a topological space, the countable intersections of dense open subsets form a filter base which generates the filter of comeager subsets.
  • Let X be a set and let (xi)iI be a net with values in X, i.e., a family whose domain I is a directed set. The filter base of tails of (xi) consists of the sets {xj,ji} for iI; it is downwards-closed by directedness of I. The generated filter is called the eventuality filter or filter of tails of (xn). A sequential filter[26] or elementary filter[9] is a filter which is the eventuality filter of some net. This example is fundamental in the application of filters in topology.[13][27]
  • Every π-system is a filter base.

Trace of a filter on a subset

If is a filter on X and YX, the trace of on Y is {AY,A}, which is a filter.[15]

Image of a filter by a function

Let f:XY be a function.

When is a family of subsets of X, its image by f is defined as

f()={{f(x),xA},A}

The image filter by f of a filter on X is defined as the generated filter f().[28] If f is surjective, then f() is already a filter. In the general case, f() is a filter base and hence f() is its upwards closure.[29] Furthermore, if is a filter base of then f() is a filter base of f().

The kernels of and f() are linked by f()f().

Product of filters

Given a family of sets (Xi)iI and a filter i on each Xi, the product filter iIi on the product set iIXi is defined as the filter generated by the sets πi1(A) for iI and Ai, where πi:(jIXj)Xi is the projection from the product set onto the i-th component.[12][30] This construction is similar to the product topology.

If each i is a filter base on i, a filter base of iIi is given by the sets iIAi where (Ai) is a family such that Aii for all iI and Ai=Xi for all but finitely many iI.[12][31]

See also

Notes

  1. The intersection of zero subsets of X is X itself.
  2. It is immediate that a filter on X is an order filter on 𝒫(X). For the converse, let be an order filter on 𝒫(X). It is upwards-closed by definition. We check closure under finite intersections. If A0,,An1 is a finite family of subsets from , it has a lower bound in by downwards-closure, which is some B such that BA0,,BAn1. Then BA0An1, hence A0An1 by upwards-closure.

Citations

  1. Cartan 1937a.
  2. Cartan 1937b.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Császár 1978, p. 56.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Schechter 1996, p. 100.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Willard 2004, p. 78.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 29.
  7. Joshi 1983, p. 241.
  8. Köthe 1983, p. 11.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Schubert 1968, p. 48.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Schubert 1968, p. 49.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Schechter 1996, p. 102.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Bourbaki 1987, pp. 57–68.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 Joshi 1983, p. 242.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 30.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Schechter 1996, p. 103.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Schechter 1996, p. 104.
  17. Jech, Thomas (2006). Set Theory: The Third Millennium Edition, Revised and Expanded. Berlin New York: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 74. ISBN 978-3-540-44085-7. OCLC 50422939. 
  18. Schechter 1996, pp. 100–130.
  19. Wilansky 2013, p. 44.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 33.
  21. Schechter 1996, p. 16.
  22. 22.0 22.1 Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 34.
  23. 23.0 23.1 Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 31.
  24. Schubert 1968, p. 50.
  25. Császár 1978, p. 57.
  26. Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 35.
  27. Narici & Beckenstein 2011, p. 5.
  28. Joshi 1983, p. 246.
  29. Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 37.
  30. Dolecki & Mynard 2016, p. 39.
  31. Köthe 1983, p. 14.

References

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