Distributivity Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, and in particular in abstract algebra, distributivity is a property of binary operations that generalises the distributive law from elementary algebra. For example:- 4 · (2 + 3) = (4 · 2) + (4 · 3)
| Table of contents |
|
2 Examples 3 Generalizations of distributivity |
Given a set S and two binary operations * and + on S, we say that
Definition
x * (y + z) = (x * y) + (x * z);
(y + z) * x = (y * x) + (z * x);
Notice that when * is commutative, then the three above conditions are logically equivalent.
Examples
Distributivity is most commonly found in ringss and distributive lattices.
A ring has two binary operations (commonly called "+" and "*"), and one of the requirements of a ring is that * must distribute over +. Most kinds of numbers (example 1) and matrices (example 3) form rings.
A lattice is another kind of algebraic structure with two binary operations, ^ and v. If either of these operations (say ^) distributes over the other (v), then v must also distribute over ^, and the lattice is called distributive. See also the article on distributivity (order theory).
Examples 4 and 5 are Boolean algebras, which can be interpreted either as a special kind of ring (a Boolean ring) or a special kind of distributive lattice (a Boolean lattice). Each interpretation is responsible for different distributive laws in the Boolean algebra. Examples 6 and 7 are distributive lattices which are not Boolean algebras.
Rings and distributive lattices are both special kinds of rigss, certain generalisations of rings. Those numbers in example 1 that don't form rings at least form rigs. Near-rigs are a further generalisation of rigs that are left-distributive but not right-distributive; example 2 is a near-rig.
In several mathematical areas, generalized distributivity laws are considered. This may involve the weakening of the above conditions or the extension to infinitary operations. Especially in order theory one finds numerous important variants of distributivity, some of which include infinitary operations, others being defined in the presence of only one binary operation. Details of the according definitions and their relations are given in the article distributivity (order theory). This also includes the notion of a completely distributive lattice.
In the presence of an ordering relation, one can also weaken the above equalities by replacing = by either ≤ or ≥. Naturally, this will lead to meaningful concepts only in some situations. An application of this principle is the notion of sub-distributivity as explained in the article on intervals.
This is an Article on Distributivity. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Distributivity Generalizations of distributivity
