Ring of sets
In mathematics, there are two different notions of a ring of sets, both referring to certain families of sets.
In order theory, a nonempty family of sets is called a ring if it is closed under union and intersection. That is, the following two statements are true for all sets and,
- implies and
- implies
- implies and
- implies
which shows that a family of sets closed under relative complement is also closed under intersection, so that a ring in the measure-theoretic sense is also a ring in the order-theoretic sense.
Examples
If is any set, then the power set of forms a ring of sets in either sense.If is a partially ordered set, then its upper sets are closed under both intersections and unions. However, in general it will not be closed under differences of sets.
The open sets and closed sets of any topological space are closed under both unions and intersections.
On the real line, the family of sets consisting of the empty set and all finite unions of half-open intervals of the form, with is a ring in the measure-theoretic sense.
If is any transformation defined on a space, then the sets that are mapped into themselves by are closed under both unions and intersections.
If two rings of sets are both defined on the same elements, then the sets that belong to both rings themselves form a ring of sets.
Related structures
A ring of sets in the order-theoretic sense forms a distributive lattice in which the intersection and union operations correspond to the lattice's meet and join operations, respectively. Conversely, every distributive lattice is isomorphic to a ring of sets; in the case of finite distributive lattices, this is Birkhoff's representation theorem and the sets may be taken as the lower sets of a partially ordered set.A family of sets closed under union and relative complement is also closed under symmetric difference and intersection. Conversely, every family of sets closed under both symmetric difference and intersection is also closed under union and relative complement. This is due to the identities
- and
In the measure-theoretic sense, a is a ring closed under unions, and a δ-ring is a ring closed under countable intersections. Explicitly, a σ-ring over is a set such that for any sequence we have
Given a set a − also called an − is a ring that contains This definition entails that an algebra is closed under absolute complement A σ-algebra is an algebra that is also closed under countable unions, or equivalently a σ-ring that contains In fact, by de Morgan's laws, a δ-ring that contains is necessarily a σ-algebra as well. Fields of sets, and especially σ-algebras, are central to the modern theory of probability and the definition of measures.
A ' is a family of sets with the properties
- If holds, then if and only if
- implies and
- implies for some disjoint
A ' or is a collection of subsets of satisfying the semiring properties except with replaced with:
- If then there exists a finite number of mutually disjoint sets such that
and every since it is closed under intersection, and disjoint since they are contained in the disjoint 's. Moreover the condition is strictly stronger: any that is both a ring and a semialgebra is an algebra, hence any ring that is not an algebra is also not a semialgebra.