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cofinality (Definition)

Definitions

Let $ (P,\leq)$ be a poset. A subset $ A\subseteq P$ is said to be cofinal in $ P$ if for every $ x\in P$ there is a $ y\in A$ such that $ x\le y$. A function $ f\colon X\to P$ is said to be cofinal if $ f(X)$ is cofinal in $ P$. The least cardinality of a cofinal set of $ P$ is called the cofinality of $ P$. Equivalently, the cofinality of $ P$ is the least ordinal $ \alpha$ such that there is a cofinal function $ f\colon\alpha\to P$. The cofinality of $ P$ is written $ \operatorname{cf}(P)$, or $ \operatorname{cof}(P)$.

Cofinality of totally ordered sets

If $ (T,\leq)$ is a totally ordered set, then it must contain a well-ordered cofinal subset which is order-isomorphic to $ \operatorname{cf}(T)$. Or, put another way, there is a cofinal function $ f\colon\operatorname{cf}(T)\to T$ with the property that $ f(x)<f(y)$ whenever $ x<y$.

For any ordinal $ \beta$ we must have $ \operatorname{cf}(\beta)\leq\beta$, because the identity map on $ \beta$ is cofinal. In particular, this is true for cardinals, so any cardinal $ \kappa$ either satisfies $ \operatorname{cf}(\kappa)=\kappa$, in which case it is said to be regular, or it satisfies $ \operatorname{cf}(\kappa)<\kappa$, in which case it is said to be singular.

The cofinality of any totally ordered set is necessarily a regular cardinal.

Cofinality of cardinals

0 and $ 1$ are regular cardinals. All other finite cardinals have cofinality $ 1$ and are therefore singular.

It is easy to see that $ \operatorname{cf}(\aleph_0)=\aleph_0$, so $ \aleph_0$ is regular.

$ \aleph_1$ is regular, because the union of countably many countable sets is countable. More generally, all infinite successor cardinals are regular.

The smallest infinite singular cardinal is $ \aleph_{\omega}$. In fact, the function $ f\colon\omega\to\aleph_{\omega}$ given by $ f(n)=\omega_n$ is cofinal, so $ \operatorname{cf}(\aleph_\omega)=\aleph_0$. More generally, for any nonzero limit ordinal $ \delta$, the function $ f\colon\delta\to\aleph_\delta$ given by $ f(\alpha)=\omega_\alpha$ is cofinal, and this can be used to show that $ \operatorname{cf}(\aleph_\delta)=\operatorname{cf}(\delta)$.

Let $ \kappa$ be an infinite cardinal. It can be shown that $ \operatorname{cf}(\kappa)$ is the least cardinal $ \mu$ such that $ \kappa$ is the sum of $ \mu$ cardinals each of which is less than $ \kappa$. This fact together with König's theorem tells us that $ \kappa<\kappa^{\operatorname{cf}(\kappa)}$. Replacing $ \kappa$ by $ 2^\kappa$ in this inequality we can further deduce that $ \kappa<\operatorname{cf}(2^\kappa)$. In particular, $ \operatorname{cf}(2^{\aleph_0})>\aleph_0$, from which it follows that $ 2^{\aleph_0}\neq\aleph_\omega$ (this being the smallest uncountable aleph which is provably not the cardinality of the continuum).



"cofinality" is owned by yark. [ full author list (2) | owner history (1) ]
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Also defines:  cofinal, regular cardinal, singular cardinal, regular, singular

Attachments:
partitions less than cofinality (Result) by Henry
another definition of cofinality (Definition) by x_bas
frequently in (Definition) by CWoo
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Cross-references: cardinality of the continuum, aleph, uncountable, König's theorem, limit ordinal, successor cardinals, infinite, countable, union, easy to see, finite, cardinals, identity map, well-ordered, totally ordered set, cardinality, function, subset, poset
There are 20 references to this entry.

This is version 22 of cofinality, born on 2002-02-19, modified 2006-10-12.
Object id is 2205, canonical name is Cofinality.
Accessed 10793 times total.

Classification:
AMS MSC03E04 (Mathematical logic and foundations :: Set theory :: Ordered sets and their cofinalities; pcf theory)

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