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Encyclopedia > Noncrossing partition

In combinatorial mathematics, the topic of noncrossing partitions has assumed some importance because of (among other things) its application to the theory free probability.

A noncrossing partition of ten points
A noncrossing partition of ten points
Contents

Definition

A partition of a set S is a pairwise disjoint set of non-empty subsets, called "parts" or "blocks", whose union is all of S. Consider a finite set that is linearly ordered, or (equivalently, for purposes of this definition) arranged in a cyclic order like the vertices of a regular n-gon. No generality is lost by taking this set to be S = { 1, ..., n }. A noncrossing partition of S is a partition in which no two blocks "cross" each other, i.e., if a and b belong to one block and x and y to another, they are not arranged in the order a x b y. If one draws an arch based at a and b, and another arch based at x and y, then the two arches cross each other if the order is a x b y but not if it is a x y b or a b x y. In the latter two orders the partition { { a, b }, { x, y } } is noncrossing.

Crossing: a x b y
Noncrossing: a x y b
Noncrossing: a b x y


Equivalently, if we label the vertices of a regular n-gon with the numbers 1 through n, the convex hulls of different blocks of the partition are disjoint from each other, i.e., they also do not "cross" each other.


Lattice structure

Like the set of all partitions of the set { 1, ..., n }, the set of all noncrossing partitions is a lattice when partially ordered by saying that a finer partition is "less than" a coarser partition. However, although it is a subset of the lattice of all partitions, it is not a sublattice of the lattice of all partitions, because the join operations do not agree. In other words, the finest partition that is coarser than both of two noncrossing partitions is not always the finest noncrossing partition that is coarser than both of them.


Unlike the lattice of all partitions of the set, the lattice of all noncrossing partitions of a set is self-dual, i.e., it is order-isomorphic to the lattice that results from inverting the partial order ("turning it upside-down"). Indeed, every interval within this lattice is self-dual.


How many noncrossing partitions does a finite set have?

The set of all noncrossing partitions is one of many sets enumerated by the Catalan numbers, i.e., the number of noncrossing partitions of a set of size n is

Role in free probability theory

The lattice of noncrossing partitions plays the same role in defining "free cumulants" in free probability theory that is played by the lattice of all partitions in defining joint cumulants in classical probability theory. See also Wigner semicircle distribution.


References

Germain Kreweras, "Sur les partitions non croisées d'un cycle", Discrete Mathematics, volume 1, number 4, pages 333-350, 1972.


Rodica Simion, "Noncrossing partitions", Discrete Mathematics, volume 217, numbers 1-3, pages 367-409, April 2000.


Roland Speicher, "Free probability and noncrossing partitions" (http://www.emis.de/journals/SLC/wpapers/s39speicher.html), Séminaire Lotharingien de Combinatoire (http://www.emis.de/journals/SLC), B39c (1997), 38 pages, 1997


  Results from FactBites:
 
Noncrossing partition - definition of Noncrossing partition in Encyclopedia (547 words)
A noncrossing partition of S is a partition in which no two blocks "cross" each other, i.e., if a and b belong to one block and x and y to another, they are not arranged in the order a x b y.
Unlike the lattice of all partitions of the set, the lattice of all noncrossing partitions of a set is self-dual, i.e., it is order-isomorphic to the lattice that results from inverting the partial order ("turning it upside-down").
The lattice of noncrossing partitions plays the same role in defining "free cumulants" in free probability theory that is played by the lattice of all partitions in defining joint cumulants in classical probability theory.
Partition of a set - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (734 words)
In mathematics, a partition of a set X is a division of X into non-overlapping "parts" or "blocks" or "cells" that cover all of X.
A partition of a set X is a set of nonempty subsets of X such that every element x in X is in exactly one of these subsets.
The lattice of noncrossing partitions of a finite set has recently taken on importance because of its role in free probability theory.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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