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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 partially ordered set 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.
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 characteristicIn algebraic topology, the Euler characteristic is a topological invariant (infact homotopy invariant) defined for broad class of topological spaces. It is usually denoted by. Sometimes in topology also called as Euler number''. In case of 2-dimensional t.