Subtle cardinal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, subtle cardinals and ethereal cardinals are closely related kinds of large cardinal number.

A cardinal is called subtle if for every closed and unbounded and for every sequence of length such that for all (where is the th element), there exist , belonging to , with , such that .

A cardinal is called ethereal if for every closed and unbounded and for every sequence of length such that and has the same cardinality as for arbitrary , there exist , belonging to , with , such that .[1]

Subtle cardinals were introduced by Jensen & Kunen (1969). Ethereal cardinals were introduced by Ketonen (1974). Any subtle cardinal is ethereal,[1]p. 388 and any strongly inaccessible ethereal cardinal is subtle.[1]p. 391

Characterizations

Summarize
Perspective

Some equivalent properties to subtlety are known.

Relationship to Vopěnka's Principle

Subtle cardinals are equivalent to a weak form of Vopěnka cardinals. Namely, an inaccessible cardinal is subtle if and only if in , any logic has stationarily many weak compactness cardinals.[2]

Vopenka's principle itself may be stated as the existence of a strong compactness cardinal for each logic.

Chains in transitive sets

There is a subtle cardinal if and only if every transitive set of cardinality contains and such that is a proper subset of and and .[3]Corollary 2.6 If a cardinal is subtle, then for every , every transitive set of cardinality includes a chain (under inclusion) of order type .[3]Theorem 2.2

Extensions

A hypersubtle cardinal is a subtle cardinal which has a stationary set of subtle cardinals below it.[4]p.1014

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.