Direct product
The direct product is a construction of structures from smaller structures.
Specifally, if is an index set, and
is a family of structures of the same species, the direct product of the family
, denoted
or simply
is the Cartesian product of the sets
, with coordinatewise relations.
One can form direct products of groups, rings, modules, topologies, partially ordered sets, and other structures. However, certain structures do not admit direct products, e.g., totally ordered sets and fields. For instance, if and
are totally ordered sets, then the set
is only a partially ordered set, for if
are elements of
and
are elements of
, then the two elements
are incomparable. Similarly, if
and
are fields, and
is a non-zero element of
, then the non-zero element
has no inverse, since 0 has no inverse; thus the direct product
is a ring, but not a field.
The direct product should not be confused with the direct sum, though the two constructions coincide when only finitely many structures are involved.