Subtle cardinal

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

A cardinal κ is called subtle if for every closed and unbounded Cκ and for every sequence (Aδ)δ<κ of length κ such that Aδδ for all δ<κ (where Aδ is the δth element), there exist α,β, belonging to C, with α<β, such that Aα=Aβα.

A cardinal κ is called ethereal if for every closed and unbounded Cκ and for every sequence (Aδ)δ<κ of length κ such that Aδδ and Aδ has the same cardinality as δ for arbitrary δ<κ, there exist α,β, belonging to C, with α<β, such that card(α)=card(AβAα).[1]

Subtle cardinals were introduced by Template:Harvtxt. Ethereal cardinals were introduced by Template:Harvtxt. Any subtle cardinal is ethereal,[1]p. 388 and any strongly inaccessible ethereal cardinal is subtle.[1]p. 391

Characterizations

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 κ is subtle if and only if in Vκ+1, 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 κ if and only if every transitive set S of cardinality κ contains x and y such that x is a proper subset of y and x and x{}.[3]Corollary 2.6 An infinite ordinal κ is subtle if and only if for every λ<κ, every transitive set S of cardinality κ includes a chain (under inclusion) of order type λ.

Extensions

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

See also

References

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Citations

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Template:Citation
  2. W. Boney, S. Dimopoulos, V. Gitman, M. Magidor "Model Theoretic Characterizations of Large Cardinals Revisited"
  3. H. Friedman, "Primitive Independence Results" (2002). Accessed 18 April 2024.
  4. C. Henrion, "Properties of Subtle Cardinals. Journal of Symbolic Logic, vol. 52, no. 4 (1987), pp.1005--1019."