Regular cardinal

Regular cardinal

In set theory, a regular cardinal is a cardinal number that is equal to its own cofinality. So, crudely speaking, a regular cardinal is one which cannot be broken into a smaller collection of smaller parts.

(The situation is slightly more complicated in contexts where the axiom of choice might fail; in that case not all cardinals are necessarily the cardinalities of well-ordered sets. In that case, the above definition is restricted to well-orderable cardinals only.) If the axiom of choice holds (so that any cardinal number can be well-ordered), an infinite cardinal κ is regular if and only if it cannot be expressed as the cardinal sum of a set of cardinality less than κ, the elements of which are cardinals less than κ.

An infinite ordinal α is regular if and only if it is a limit ordinal which is not the limit of a set of smaller ordinals which set has order type less than α. A regular ordinal is always an initial ordinal, though some initial ordinals are not regular.

Infinite well-ordered cardinals which are not regular are called singular cardinals. Finite cardinal numbers are typically not called regular or singular.

Examples

The ordinals less than omega are finite. A finite sequence of finite ordinals always has a finite maximum, so omega cannot be the limit of any sequence of type less than omega whose elements are ordinals less than omega, and is therefore a regular ordinal. aleph_0 (aleph-null) is a regular cardinal because its initial ordinal, omega, is regular. It can also be seen directly to be regular, as the cardinal sum of a finite number of finite cardinal numbers is itself finite.

omega+1 is the next ordinal number greater than omega. It is singular, since it is not a limit ordinal. omega+omega is the next limit ordinal after omega. It can be written as the limit of the sequence omega, omega+1, omega+2, omega+3, and so on. This sequence has order type omega, so omega+omega is the limit of a sequence of type less than omega+omega whose elements are ordinals less than omega+omega, therefore it is singular.

aleph_1 is the next cardinal number greater than aleph_0, so the cardinals less than aleph_1 are countable (finite or denumerable). Assuming the axiom of choice, the union of a countable set of countable sets is itself countable. So aleph_1 cannot be written as the sum of a countable set of countable cardinal numbers, and is regular.

aleph_omega is the next cardinal number after the sequence aleph_0, aleph_1, aleph_2, aleph_3, and so on. Its initial ordinal omega_omega is the limit of the sequence omega, omega_1, omega_2, omega_3, and so on, which has order type omega, so omega_omega is singular, and so is aleph_omega. Assuming the axiom of choice, aleph_omega is the first infinite cardinal which is singular (the first infinite "ordinal" which is singular is omega+1). Proving the existence of singular cardinals requires the axiom of replacement, and in fact the inability to prove the existence of aleph_omega in Zermelo set theory is what led Fraenkel to postulate this axiom.

Properties

Uncountable limit cardinals that are also regular are known as weakly inaccessible cardinals. They cannot be proved to exist within ZFC, though their existence is not known to be inconsistent with ZFC. Their existence is sometimes taken as an additional axiom. Inaccessible cardinals are necessarily fixed points of the aleph function, though not all fixed points are regular. For instance, the first fixed point is the limit of the ω-sequence aleph_0, aleph_{aleph_0}, aleph_{aleph_{aleph_0, ... and is therefore singular.

If the axiom of choice holds, then every successor cardinal is regular. Thus the regularity or singularity of most aleph numbers can be checked depending on whether the cardinal is a successor cardinal or a limit cardinal. Some cardinal numbers cannot be proven to be equal to any particular aleph, for instance the cardinality of the continuum, whose value in ZFC may be any uncountable cardinal of uncountable cofinality. The continuum hypothesis postulates that the cardinality of the continuum is equal to aleph_1 which is regular.

Without the axiom of choice, there would be cardinal numbers which were not well-orderable. Moreover, the cardinal sum of an arbitrary collection could not be defined. Therefore only the aleph numbers can meaningfully be called regular or singular cardinals. Furthermore, a successor aleph need not be regular. For instance, the union of a countable set of countable sets need not be countable. It is consistent with ZF that omega_1 be the limit of a countable sequence of countable ordinals as well as the set of real numbers is countable union of countable sets. Indeed, the existence of any regular aleph other than aleph_0 is not provable without the axiom of choice.

See also

* Inaccessible cardinal

References

* "Elements of Set Theory", by Herbert B. Enderton, ISBN 0-12-238440-7
* "Set Theory, An Introduction to Independence Proofs", by Kenneth Kunen, ISBN 0-444-85401-0


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Regular — The term regular can mean normal or obeying rules. Regular may refer to:In organizations: * Regular Army for usage in the U.S. Army * Regular clergy, members of a religious order subject to a rule of life * Regular Force for usage in the Canadian …   Wikipedia

  • Cardinal function — In mathematics, a cardinal function (or cardinal invariant) is a function that returns cardinal numbers. Contents 1 Cardinal functions in set theory 2 Cardinal functions in topology 2.1 Basic inequalities …   Wikipedia

  • Cardinal Vicar — ( it. Cardinale Vicario) is a title commonly given to the vicar general of the diocese of Rome for the portion of the diocese within Italy. The official title, as given in the Annuario Pontificio (under the heading Vicariate of Rome ), is Vicar… …   Wikipedia

  • Cardinal Vicar — • The vicar general of the pope, as Bishop of Rome, for the spiritual administration of the city, and its surrounding district, properly known as Vicarius Urbis Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Cardinal Vicar     Cardinal V …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts — is a Catholic arts high school located in Toronto, Canada. CCAAThroughout the 1980s the Metropolitan Separate School Board (now the Toronto Catholic District School Board) considered establishing a school for the performing arts. It was felt that …   Wikipedia

  • Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School — The Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School is a Roman Catholic voluntary aided comprehensive school in Holland Park, Kensington and Chelsea, London. Since 1998, the Headmaster has been Michael Gormally. The School has Specialist Status in mathematics… …   Wikipedia

  • Regular Batasang Pambansa — The Regular Batasang Pambansa or the Second Batasan was the meeting of the parliament of the Philippines from the beginning of its session on July 23, 1984 until it was abolished by President Corazon Aquino on March 25, 1986. EventsMarcos… …   Wikipedia

  • Cardinal McKeefry Catholic Primary School — Infobox NZ school name = Cardinal McKeefry Catholic Primary and Intermediate School, Wellington motto = safe, happy, caring, creative equitable type = Catholic Integrated Primary Intermediate School for girls and boys from Year 1 Year 8… …   Wikipedia

  • Inaccessible cardinal — In set theory, an uncountable regular cardinal number is called weakly inaccessible if it is a weak limit cardinal, and strongly inaccessible, or just inaccessible, if it is a strong limit cardinal. Some authors do not require weakly and strongly …   Wikipedia

  • Remarkable cardinal — In mathematics, a remarkable cardinal is a certain kind of large cardinal number.Formally, a cardinal kappa; is called remarkable iff for all regular cardinals theta; > kappa;, there exist pi;, M , lambda;, sigma;, N and rho; such that# pi; : M… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”