Scott domain Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In the mathematical fields of order and domain theory, a Scott domain is an algebraic, bounded complete cpo. It has been named in honour of Dana S. Scott, who was the first to study these structures at the advent of domain theory. Scott domains are very closely related to algebraic lattices, being different only in possibly lacking a greatest element.Formally, a partially ordered set (D, ≤) is called a Scott domain, if the following hold:
- D is directed complete, i.e. all directed subsets of D have a supremum.
- D is bounded complete, i.e. all subsets of D that have some upper bound have a supremum.
- D is algebraic, i.e. every element of D can be obtained as the supremum of a directed set of compact elements of D.
It should be remarked that the property of being bounded complete is equivalent to the existence of all non-empty infima. It is well known that the existence of all infima implies the existence of all suprema and thus makes a partially ordered set into a complete lattice. Thus, when a top element (the infimum of the empty set) is adjoined to a Scott domain, one can conclude that:
- the new top element is compact (since the order was directed complete before) and
- the resulting poset will be an algebraic lattice (i.e. a complete lattice that is algebraic).
Scott domains are closely related to Scott information systems, which constitute a "syntactic" representation of Scott domains.
See the literature given for domain theory. This is an Article on Scott domain. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Scott domain Examples
Literature
