|  Enumeration and Properties of Partially Ordered Sets | 
In General  up to posets.
 up to posets.
  * Symbols: We denote by
    \(\cal L\)n the set of labelled
    n-element posets, by \(\cal P\)n
    the set of unlabelled ones, and by \(\cal C\)n
    the set of connected ones.
  * Status: As of 2000, exact numbers are
    known up to |\(\cal P\)14| = 1.338.193.159.771 and
    |\(\cal L\)16| (their values are not close to those
    given by the n → ∞ formula, because 16 is still too small);
    By 2012, numbers up to |\(\cal P\)16| and
    |\(\cal L\)18| were known (see the lists below).
  * Results: The number of labelled,
    unlabelled, and connected n-element posets, for the first values of n is
| n | |\(\cal L\)n| | |\(\cal P\)n| | |\(\cal C\)n| | 
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 
| 2 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 
| 3 | 19 | 5 | 3 | 
| 4 | 219 | 16 | 10 | 
| 5 | 4231 | 63 | 44 | 
| 6 | 130,023 | 318 | 238 | 
| 7 | 6,129,859 | 2,045 | 1,650 | 
| 8 | 431,723,379 | 16,999 | 14,512 | 
| 9 | 44,511,042,511 | 183,231 | 163,341 | 
| 10 | 6,611,065,248,783 | 2,567,284 | 2,360,719 | 
| 11 | 1,396,281,677,105,899 | 46,749,427 | 43,944,974 | 
| 12 | 414,864,951,055,853,499 | 1,104,891,746 | 1,055,019,099 | 
| 13 | 171,850,728,381,587,059,351 | 33,823,827,452 | 32,664,984,238 | 
| 14 | 98,484,324,257,128,207,032,183 | 1,338,193,159,771 | 1,303,143,553,205 | 
| 15 | 77,567,171,020,440,688,353,049,939 | 68,275,077,901,156 | 66,900,392,672,168 | 
| 16 | 83,480,529,785,490,157,813,844,256,579 | 4,483,130,665,195,087 | 4,413,439,778,321,689 | 
| 17 | 122,152,541,250,295,322,862,941,281,269,151 | ||
| 18 | 241,939,392,597,201,176,602,897,820,148,085,023 | 
  * Examples: The first few sets, for n up
    to 3, are \(\cal P\)1 = {\(\bullet\),},
    \(\cal P\)2 = {\(\bullet\,\bullet\),
     },
    \(\cal P\)3 = {\(\bullet\bullet\bullet\),
    \(\bullet\)
 },
    \(\cal P\)3 = {\(\bullet\bullet\bullet\),
    \(\bullet\)  ,
,
     ,
,
     ,
,
     },
    while  \(\cal C\)1 = {\(\bullet\)},
    \(\cal C\)2 = {
},
    while  \(\cal C\)1 = {\(\bullet\)},
    \(\cal C\)2 = { },
    \(\cal C\)3 = {
},
    \(\cal C\)3 = { ,
,
     ,
,
     }.
}.
  @ General references:
    Culberson & Rawlins Ord(90) [up to n = 11];
    Erné & Stege Ord(91) [up to n = 14];
    Chaunier & Lygeros Ord(92) [n = 13];
    Heitzig & Reinhold Ord(00),
    Lygeros & Zimmermann www(00) [n = 14];
    Brinkmann & McKay Ord(02) [n = 15, 16],
    and McKay site copy.
  @ Special types of posets: Lewis & Zhang JCTA(13)-a1106 [(3+1)-avoiding posets];
    Stanley PAMS(74)
      [posets generated by disjoint unions and ordinal sums].
  > Online resources:
    see The Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS) site;
    Chapel Hill Poset Atlas site. 
Asymptotic Properties
  * Asymptotic numbers: For n
    → ∞, the number of labelled or unlabelled posets on n elements goes like 2n^2/4; More precisely, the asymptotic value for the number of labelled posets in the case
    of even n is
|\(\cal P\)n| ~ C 2n^2/4+3n/2 en n−n−1, where C ≅ 0.8059,
    and something quite similar for n odd.
  * Asymptotic structure: As n
    → ∞, the fraction of posets that are 3-layered, with n/2 elements
    in the middle layer and n/4 elements in the bottom and top layers, each one
    linked to half of the middle-layer elements, tends to 1.
  @ General references: Kleitman & Rothschild TAMS(75);
    Dhar PJM(80)-mr;
    Henson et al a1504
      [onset of the Kleitman-Rothschild 3-layer structure].
  @ Phase transitions: Dhar JMP(78);
    Kleitman & Rothschild PhyA(79);
    Pittel & Tungol RSA(01).
 main page
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  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 12 jun 2020