A poset
P is said to be a
differential poset, and in particular to be
r-
differential (where
r is a positive
integer), if it satisfies the following conditions: •
P is
graded and
locally finite with a unique minimal element; • for every two distinct elements
x,
y of
P, the number of elements
covering both
x and
y is the same as the number of elements covered by both
x and
y; and • for every element
x of
P, the number of elements covering
x is exactly
r more than the number of elements covered by
x. These basic properties may be restated in various ways. For example, Stanley shows that the number of elements covering two distinct elements
x and
y of a differential poset is always either 0 or 1, so the second defining property could be altered accordingly. The defining properties may also be restated in the following
linear algebraic setting: taking the elements of the poset
P to be formal
basis vectors of an (infinite-dimensional)
vector space, let
D and
U be the
operators defined so that
D x is equal to the sum of the elements covered by
x, and
U x is equal to the sum of the elements covering
x. (The operators
D and
U are called the
down and
up operator, for obvious reasons.) Then the second and third conditions may be replaced by the statement that
DU −
UD =
rI (where
I is the identity). This latter reformulation makes a differential poset into a combinatorial realization of a
Weyl algebra, and in particular explains the name
differential: the operators "
d/dx" and "multiplication by
x" on the vector space of
polynomials obey the same commutation relation as
D/
r and
U. ==Examples==