Indescribable cardinal

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In set theory, a branch of mathematics, a Q-indescribable cardinal is a certain kind of large cardinal number that is hard to axiomatize in some language Q. There are many different types of indescribable cardinals corresponding to different choices of languages Q. They were introduced by Template:Harvtxt.

A cardinal number κ is called Πmn-indescribable if for every Πm proposition ϕ, and set AVκ with (Vκ+n,,A)ϕ there exists an α<κ with (Vα+n,,AVα)ϕ.[1] Following Lévy's hierarchy, here one looks at formulas with m-1 alternations of quantifiers with the outermost quantifier being universal. Σmn-indescribable cardinals are defined in a similar way, but with an outermost existential quantifier. Prior to defining the structure (Vκ+n,,A), one new predicate symbol is added to the language of set theory, which is interpreted as A.[2] The idea is that κ cannot be distinguished (looking from below) from smaller cardinals by any formula of n+1-th order logic with m-1 alternations of quantifiers even with the advantage of an extra unary predicate symbol (for A). This implies that it is large because it means that there must be many smaller cardinals with similar properties. Template:Citation needed

The cardinal number κ is called totally indescribable if it is Πmn-indescribable for all positive integers m and n.

If α is an ordinal, the cardinal number κ is called α-indescribable if for every formula ϕ and every subset U of Vκ such that ϕ(U) holds in Vκ+α there is a some λ<κ such that ϕ(UVλ) holds in Vλ+α. If α is infinite then α-indescribable ordinals are totally indescribable, and if α is finite they are the same as Πωα-indescribable ordinals. There is no κ that is κ-indescribable, nor does α-indescribability necessarily imply β-indescribability for any β<α, but there is an alternative notion of shrewd cardinals that makes sense when ακ: if ϕ(U,κ) holds in Vκ+α, then there are λ<κ and β such that ϕ(UVλ,λ) holds in Vλ+β.[3] However, it is possible that a cardinal π is κ-indescribable for κ much greater than π.[1]Ch. 9, theorem 4.3

Historical note

Originally, a cardinal κ was called Q-indescribable if for every Q-formula ϕ and relation A, if (κ,<,A)ϕ then there exists an α<κ such that (α,,Aα)ϕ.[4][5] Using this definition, κ is Π01-indescribable iff κ is regular and greater than 0.[5]p.207 The cardinals κ satisfying the above version based on the cumulative hierarchy were called strongly Q-indescribable.[6] This property has also been referred to as "ordinal Q-indescribability".[7]p.32

Equivalent conditions

A cardinal is Σn+11-indescribable iff it is Πn1-indescribable.[8] A cardinal is inaccessible if and only if it is Πn0-indescribable for all positive integers n, equivalently iff it is Π20-indescribable, equivalently if it is Σ11-indescribable.

Π11-indescribable cardinals are the same as weakly compact cardinals.[9]p. 59

The indescribability condition is equivalent to Vκ satisfying the reflection principle (which is provable in ZFC), but extended by allowing higher-order formulae with a second-order free variable.[8]

For cardinals κ<θ, say that an elementary embedding j:MH(θ) a small embedding if M is transitive and j(crit(j))=κ. For any natural number 1n, κ is Πn1-indescribable iff there is an α>κ such that for all θ>α there is a small embedding j:MHθ such that H(crit(j)+)MΣnH(crit(j)+).[10], Corollary 4.3

If V=L, then for a natural number n>0, an uncountable cardinal is ΠTemplate:Su-indescribable iff it's (n+1)-stationary.[11]

Enforceable classes

For a class X of ordinals and a Γ-indescribable cardinal κ, X is said to be enforced at α (by some formula ϕ of Γ) if there is a Γ-formula ϕ and an AVκ such that (Vκ,,A)ϕ, but for no β<α with βX does (Vβ,,AVβ)ϕ hold.[1]p.277 This gives a tool to show necessary properties of indescribable cardinals.

Properties

The property of κ being Πn1-indescribable is Πn+11 over Vκ, i.e. there is a Πn+11 sentence that Vκ satisfies iff κ is Πn1-indescribable.[9] For m>1, the property of being Πnm-indescribable is Σnm and the property of being Σnm-indescribable is Πnm.[9] Thus, for m>1, every cardinal that is either Πn+1m-indescribable or Σn+1m-indescribable is both Πnm-indescribable and Σnm-indescribable and the set of such cardinals below it is stationary. The consistency strength of Σnm-indescribable cardinals is below that of Πnm-indescribable, but for m>1 it is consistent with ZFC that the least Σnm-indescribable exists and is above the least Πnm-indescribable cardinal (this is proved from consistency of ZFC with Πnm-indescribable cardinal and a Σnm-indescribable cardinal above it).Template:Cn

Totally indescribable cardinals remain totally indescribable in the constructible universe and in other canonical inner models, and similarly for Πnm- and Σnm-indescribability.

For natural number n, if a cardinal κ is n-indescribable, there is an ordinal α<κ such that (Vα+n,)(Vκ+n,), where denotes elementary equivalence.[12] For n=0 this is a biconditional (see Two model-theoretic characterisations of inaccessibility).

Measurable cardinals are Π12-indescribable, but the smallest measurable cardinal is not Σ12-indescribable.[9]p. 61 However, assuming choice, there are many totally indescribable cardinals below any measurable cardinal.

For n1, ZFC+"there is a Σn1-indescribable cardinal" is equiconsistent with ZFC+"there is a Σn1-indescribable cardinal κ such that 2κ>κ+", i.e. "GCH fails at a Σn1-indescribable cardinal".[8]

References

Citations

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Template:Cite book
  2. Template:Cite book
  3. M. Rathjen, "The Higher Infinite in Proof Theory" (1995), p.20. Archived 14 January 2024.
  4. K. Kunen, "Indescribability and the Continuum" (1971). Appearing in Axiomatic Set Theory: Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, vol. 13 part 1, pp.199--203
  5. 5.0 5.1 Azriel Lévy, "The Sizes of the Indescribable Cardinals" (1971). Appearing in Axiomatic Set Theory: Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, vol. 13 part 1, pp.205--218
  6. Template:Cite journal
  7. W. Boos, "Lectures on large cardinal axioms". In Logic Conference, Kiel 1974. Lecture Notes in Mathematics 499 (1975).
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Template:Cite journal
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Template:Cite book
  10. Template:Cite journal
  11. Template:Cite journal
  12. W. N. Reinhardt, "Ackermann's set theory equals ZF", pp.234--235. Annals of Mathematical Logic vol. 2, iss. 2 (1970).