If p = and q = are partitions of n, with the parts arranged in the weakly decreasing order, then p precedes q in the dominance order if for any k ≥ 1, the sum of the k largest parts of p is less than or equal to the sum of the k largest parts of q: In this definition, partitions are extended by appending zero parts at the end as necessary.
Properties of the dominance ordering
Among the partitions of n, is the smallest and is the largest.
The dominance ordering implies lexicographical ordering, i.e. if p dominates q and p ≠ q, then for the smallest i such that pi ≠ qi one has pi > qi.
A partition p covers a partition q if and only if pi = qi + 1, pk = qk − 1, pj = qj for all j ≠ i,k and either k = i + 1 or qi = qk. Starting from the Young diagram of q, the Young diagram of p is obtained from it by first removing the last box of row k and then appending it either to the end of the immediately preceding row k − 1, or to the end of row i < k if the rows i through k of the Young diagram of q all have the same length.
Every partition p has a conjugate partitionp′, whose Young diagram is the transpose of the Young diagram of p. This operation reverses the dominance ordering:
Partitions of n form a lattice under the dominance ordering, denoted Ln, and the operation of conjugation is an antiautomorphism of this lattice. To explicitly describe the lattice operations, for each partition p consider the associated -tuple: The partition p can be recovered from its associated -tuple by applying the step 1difference, Moreover, the -tuples associated to partitions of n are characterized among all integer sequences of length n + 1 by the following three properties:
Nondecreasing,
Concave,
The initial term is 0 and the final term is n,
By the definition of the dominance ordering, partition p precedes partition q if and only if the associated -tuple of p is term-by-term less than or equal to the associated -tuple of q. If p, q, r are partitions then if and only if The componentwise minimum of two nondecreasing concave integer sequences is also nondecreasing and concave. Therefore, for any two partitions of n, p and q, their meet is the partition of n whose associated -tuple has components The natural idea to use a similar formula for the joinfails, because the componentwise maximum of two concave sequences need not be concave. For example, for n = 6, the partitions and have associated sequences and, whose componentwise maximum does not correspond to any partition. To show that any two partitions of n have a join, one uses the conjugation antiautomorphism: the join of p and q is the conjugate partition of the meet of p′ and q′: For the two partitions p and q in the preceding example, their conjugate partitions are and with meet , which is self-conjugate; therefore, the join of p and q is . Thomas Brylawski has determined many invariants of the lattice Ln, such as the minimal height and the maximal covering number, and classified the intervals of small length. While Ln is not distributive for n ≥ 7, it shares some properties with distributive lattices: for example, its Möbius function takes on only values 0, 1, −1.
Generalizations
Partitions of n can be graphically represented by Young diagrams on n boxes. Standard Young tableaux are certain ways to fill Young diagrams with numbers, and a partial order on them can be defined in terms of the dominance order on the Young diagrams. For a Young tableauT to dominate another Young tableau S, the shape of T must dominate that of S as a partition, and moreover the same must hold whenever T and S are first truncated to their sub-tableaux containing entries up to a given value k, for each choice of k. Similarly, there is a dominance order on the set of standard Young bitableaux, which plays a role in the theory ofstandard monomials.