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examples of countable sets
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(Example)
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This entry lists some common examples of countable sets.
Derived Examples
- any finite set, including the empty set $\varnothing$ (proof).
- any subset of a countable set (proof).
- any finite product of countable sets (proof).
- any countable union of countable sets (proof).
- the set of all finite subsets of a countable set.
Proof. Let $A$ be a countable set, and $F(A)$ the set of all finite subsets of $A$ . Let $A_n$ be the set of all subsets of $A$ of cardinality at most $n$ . Then $A_1$ is countable, since $A$ is. Suppose now that $A_n$ is countable. The function $f: A_n \times A_1 \to A_{n+1}$ where $f(X,Y)=X\cup Y$ is easily seen to be onto. Since $A_n\times A_1$ is countable, so is $A_{n+1}$ . Now, $F(A)$ is just the union of all the countable sets $A_i$ , and this union is a countable union, we see that $F(A)$ is countable too. 
- the set of all cofinite subsets of a countable set. This is true, because there is a one-to-one correspondence between the set $F(A)$ of finite sets and the set $\operatorname{co-}F(A)$ of cofinite sets: $X\mapsto A-X$ .
- the set of all finite sequences over a countable set.
Proof. Let $A$ be a countable set, and $A_F$ the set of all finite sequences over $A$ . An element of $A_F$ can be identified with an element of $A^n$ , and vice versa (the bijection is clear). Therefore, $A_F$ can be identified with the union of $A^i$ , for $i=0,1,2,\ldots$ . Since each $A^i$ is countable (because $A$ is), and we are taking a countable union, $A_F$ is countable as a result. 
- fix countable sets $A,B$ . The set $X$ of all functions from finite subsets of $B$ into $A$ is countable.
Proof. For each finite subset $C$ of $B$ , the set of all functions from $C$ to $A$ is just $A^C$ , which has cardinality $|A|^{|C|}$ , and thus is countable since $A$ is. Since $X$ is just the union of all $A^C$ , where $C$ ranges over the finite subsets of $B$ , and there are countably many of them (as $B$ is countable), $X$ is also countable. 
- fix countable sets $A,B$ and an element $a\in A$ . The set $Y$ of all functions from $B$ to $A$ such that $f(b)=a$ for all but a finite number of $b\in B$ is countable.
Proof. For any $f: B\to A$ , call the support of $f$ the set $\lbrace b \in B\mid f(b)\ne a\rbrace$ , and denote it by $\operatorname{supp}(f)$ . Then every $f\in Y$ has finite support. The map $G:Y\to X$ (where $X$ is defined in the last example) given by $G(f)=f|\operatorname{supp}(f)$ is an injection: if $G(f)=G(h)$ , then $f(b)=h(b)$ for any $b\in \operatorname{supp}(f)=\operatorname{supp}(h)$ , and $f(b)=a=h(b)$ otherwise, whence $f=g$ . But since $X$ is countable, so is $Y$ . 
Concrete Examples
- the sets $\mathbb{N}$ (natural numbers), $\mathbb{Z}$ (integers), and $\mathbb{Q}$ (rational numbers)
- the set of all algebraic numbers
Proof. Let $\mathbb{A}$ be the set of all algebraic numbers over $\mathbb{Q}$ . For each polynomial $p$ (in one variable $X$ ) over $\mathbb{Q}$ , let $R_p$ be the set of roots of $p$ over $\mathbb{Q}$ . By definition, $\mathbb{A}$ is the union of all $R_p$ , where $p$ ranges over the set $P$ of all polynomials over $\mathbb{Q}$ . For any $p \in P$ of degree $n$ , we may associate a vector $v_p \in \mathbb{Q}^{n+1}$ : $$p=a_0 + a_1X + \cdots + a_n X^n \qquad \Longleftrightarrow \qquad v_p=(a_0,a_1,\ldots, a_n).$$ The association can be reversed. So the set $P_n \subset P$ of all polynomials of degree $n$ is equinumerous to $\mathbb{Q}^{n+1}$ , and therefore countable. As $P$ is just the countable union of all $P_n$ , $P$ is countable, which means $\mathbb{A} = \bigcup
\lbrace R_p \mid p \in P\rbrace$ is countable also. 
- the set of all algebraic integers, because every algebraic integer is an algebraic number.
- the set of all words over an alphabet, because ever word can be thought of as a finite sequence over the alphabet, which is finite.
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Cross-references: alphabet, algebraic integers, vector, associate, degree, roots, variable, polynomial, algebraic numbers, rational numbers, integers, natural numbers, injection, map, finite support, support, number, ranges, fix, clear, element, finite sequences, one-to-one correspondence, cofinite, union, onto, function, cardinality, union of countable sets, product of countable sets, finite, countable, subset, empty set, finite set
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This is version 7 of examples of countable sets, born on 2009-09-29, modified 2009-09-30.
Object id is 11928, canonical name is ExamplesOfCountableSets.
Accessed 485 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 03E10 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: Set theory :: Ordinal and cardinal numbers) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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