A sequence $(P_0,P_1,\ldots)$ of finite posets is called uniform if: each $P_n$ is graded of rank $n$ with a minimum $\hat{0}_n$ and a maximum $\hat{1}_n$; for any $p \in P_n$ with $\mathrm{rank}(p)=n-i$ we have $[p,\hat{1}_n]\simeq P_i$. This is a slight adaptation of the definition that appears in Stanley, "Enumerative Combinatorics," Vol. 1, 2nd edition, Exercise 3.130: instead of defining "uniform" for a single poset, I am defining it for an infinite sequence.
Exercise 3.130(a) says that for $(P_0,P_1,\ldots)$ uniform, the matrices of Whitney numbers of the 1st and 2nd kind for the $P_i$ are inverses to one another (this generalizes the fact that the Stirling numbers of the 1st and 2nd kind are inverses, which is the case with $P_i=\Pi_{i+1}$, the lattice of set partitions of $\{1,2,\ldots,i+1\}$). Apparently this is a result of Dowling.
Exercise 3.130(b) asks for interesting examples of uniform posets.
Question: Are there any updates on this problem of finding interesting examples of (sequences of) uniform posets? Maybe even a classification under certain additional hypotheses?
Some examples I know:
- $P_i=B_i$, the Boolean lattice of subsets of $\{1,2,\ldots,i\}$;
- $P_i=B_i(q)$, the lattice of subspaces of $\mathbb{F}_q^{i}$, for $q=p^d$ a prime power and $\mathbb{F}_q$ the finite field with $q$ elements;
- $P_i=\Pi_{i+1}$, the lattice of set partitions of $\{1,2,\ldots,i+1\}$, as mentioned before.
- $P_i =$ the lattice of faces of the $i$-dimensional cross polytope (this is a kind of Type B version of the Boolean lattice).
- $P_i =$ the bond lattice of the $i$-cycle graph (or more generally the lattice of flats of the uniform matroid).
I am interested in lattices, and especially non-Eulerian lattices (e.g., not face lattices) so that $|\mu(\hat{0}_n,\hat{1}_n)|$ grows unboundedly.
EDIT: I realized that I'm really interested in a certain combinatorial phenomenon connected to many of these examples, which I inquired about in a separate question.