A partially ordered set is locally finite precisely if every closed interval [a, b] within it is finite. For every locally finite poset and every field of scalars there is an incidence algebra, an associative algebra defined as follows. The members of the incidence algebra are the functions f assigning to each interval [a, b] a scalar f(a, b). On this underlying set one defines addition and scalar multiplication pointwise, and "multiplication" in the incidence algebra is a convolution defined by

The multiplicative identity element of the incidence algebra is

An incidence algebra is finite-dimensional if and only if the underlying poset is finite.

The ζ function of an incidence algebra is the constant function ζ(a, b) = 1 for every interval [a, b]. One can show that that element is invertible in the incidence algebra (with respect to the convolution defined above). (Generally, a member h of the incidence algebra is invertible if and only if h(x, x) ≠ 0 for every x.) The multiplicative inverse of the ζ function is the Möbius function μ(a, b); every value of μ(a, b) is an integral multiple of 1 in the base field.

Table of contents
1 Examples
2 Euler characteristic
3 Literature

Examples

whenever S and T are finite subsets of E with ST.

  • The Möbius function on the set of non-negative integers with their usual order is

This corresponds to the sequence (1, −1, 0, 0, 0, ... ) of coefficients of the formal power series 1 − z, and the ζ function in this case corresponds to the sequence of coefficients (1, 1, 1, 1, ... ) of the formal power series (1 − z)−1 = 1 + z + z2 + z3 + .... The δ function in this incidence algebra similarly corresponds to the formal power series 1.

  • Partially order the set of all partitions of a finite set by saying σ ≤ τ if σ is a finer partition than τ. Then the Möbius function is

where n is the number of blocks in the finer partition σ, r is the number of blocks in the coarser partition τ, and ri is the number of blocks of τ that contain exactly i blocks of σ.

Euler characteristic

A poset is bounded if it has smallest and largest elements, which we call 0 and 1 respectively (not to be confused with the zero and the one of the base field, which, in this paragraph, we take to be Q). The Euler characteristic of a bounded finite poset is μ(0,1); it is always an integer. This concept is related to the classic Euler characteristic.

Literature

Incidence algebras of locally finite posets were treated in a number of papers of Gian-Carlo Rota beginning in 1964, and by many later combinatorialists. Rota's 1964 paper was:

On the Foundations of Combinatorial Theory I: Theory of Möbius Functions, Zeitschrift für Wahrscheinlichkeitstheorie und Verwandte Gebiete, volume 2, pages 340-368.