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Tarski's Fixed Point Theorem


Let (L,<=) be any complete lattice. Suppose f:L->L is monotone increasing (or isotone), i.e., for all x,y in L, x<=y implies f(x)<=f(y). Then the set of all fixed points of f is a complete lattice with respect to <= (Tarski 1955)

Consequently, f has a greatest fixed point u^_ and a least fixed point u__. Moreover, for all x in L, x<=f(x) implies x<=u^_, whereas f(x)<=x implies u__<=x.

Consider three examples:

1. Let a,b in R satisfy a<=b, where <= is the usual order of real numbers. Since the closed interval [a,b] is a complete lattice, every monotone increasing map f:[a,b]->[a,b] has a greatest fixed point and a least fixed point. Note that f need not be continuous here.

2. For x,y in R^n declare x<=y to mean that x_1<=y_1, ..., x_n<=y_n (coordinatewise order). Let a,b in R^n satisfy a<=b. Then the set

[a,b]={x in R^n:a<=x<=b}
(1)
=[a_1,b_1]×...×[a_n,b_n]
(2)

is a complete lattice (with respect to the coordinatewise order). Hence every monotone increasing map f:[a,b]->[a,b] has a greatest fixed point and a least fixed point.

3. Let g:A->B and h:B->A be injections. Then there is a bijection i:A->B (Schröder-Bernstein theorem), which can be constructed as follows. The power set of A ordered by set inclusion, (P(A), subset= ), is a complete lattice. Since the map f:P(A)->P(A),

 f(S)=A\h(B\g(S))    (S subset= A)
(3)

is monotone increasing, it has a fixed point C subset= A. As A\C=h(B\g(C)), a bijection i:A->B can be defined just by setting

 i(x)=g(x) if x in C,    i(x)=h^(-1)(x) if x in A\C.
(4)

See also

Complete Lattice, Map Fixed Point, Partially Ordered Set, Schröder-Bernstein Theorem

This entry contributed by Roland Uhl

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References

Tarski, A. "A Lattice-Theoretical Fixpoint Theorem and Its Applications." Pacific J. Math. 5, 285-309, 1955.

Referenced on Wolfram|Alpha

Tarski's Fixed Point Theorem

Cite this as:

Uhl, Roland. "Tarski's Fixed Point Theorem." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource, created by Eric W. Weisstein. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/TarskisFixedPointTheorem.html

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