Dilworth's theorem Mirsky was inspired by
Dilworth's theorem, stating that, for every partially ordered set, the maximum size of an antichain equals the minimum number of chains in a partition of the set into chains. For sets of
order dimension two, the two theorems coincide (a chain in the
majorization ordering of points in general position in the plane is an antichain in the set of points formed by a 90° rotation from the original set, and vice versa) but for more general partial orders the two theorems differ, and (as Mirsky observes) Dilworth's theorem is more difficult to prove. Mirsky's theorem and Dilworth's theorem are also related to each other through the theory of
perfect graphs. An undirected graph is
perfect if, in every
induced subgraph, the
chromatic number equals the size of the largest clique. In the
comparability graph of a partially ordered set, a clique represents a chain and a coloring represents a partition into antichains, and induced subgraphs of comparability graphs are themselves comparability graphs, so Mirsky's theorem states that comparability graphs are perfect. Analogously, Dilworth's theorem states that every
complement graph of a comparability graph is perfect. The
perfect graph theorem of states that the complements of perfect graphs are always perfect, and can be used to deduce Dilworth's theorem from Mirsky's theorem and vice versa .
Gallai–Hasse–Roy–Vitaver theorem Mirsky's theorem can be restated in terms of
directed acyclic graphs (representing a partially ordered set by
reachability of their vertices), as the statement that there exists a
graph homomorphism from a given directed acyclic graph
G to a
k-vertex
transitive tournament if and only if there does not exist a homomorphism from a (
k + 1)-vertex
path graph to
G. For, the largest path graph that has a homomorphism to
G gives the longest chain in the reachability ordering, and the sets of vertices with the same image in a homomorphism to a transitive tournament form a partition into antichains. This statement generalizes to the case that
G is not acyclic, and is a form of the
Gallai–Hasse–Roy–Vitaver theorem on
graph colorings and
orientations .
Erdős–Szekeres theorem It follows from either Dilworth's theorem or Mirsky's theorem that, in every partially ordered set of
rs + 1 elements, there must exist a chain of
r + 1 elements or an antichain of
s + 1 elements. uses this observation, applied to a partial order of order dimension two, to prove the
Erdős–Szekeres theorem that in every sequence of
rs + 1 totally ordered elements there must exist a monotonically increasing subsequence of
r + 1 elements or a monotonically decreasing subsequence of
s + 1 elements. ==Extensions==