- Is $\eta$, the order type of the rationals, necessarily the smallest nontrivial, dense order type?
By "smallest" I mean that there is no dense order which embeds into $\eta$, into which $\eta$ does not embed. Note that the left/right/total closure of $\eta$ will also have this property, so $\eta$ won't be unique in this regard; what matters is whether or not there can be a dense order strictly smaller than $\eta$.
Obviously, the smallest dense order is $0$ (because "$(\forall x,y\in\emptyset)(\exists z\in\emptyset)(x<z<y)$" holds vacuously), and any finite order type larger than $0$ is sparse. I just want to be sure that every smaller [nontrivial] order type is necessarily sparse, and that there isn't some bizarre order type $\tau$ which is provably dense, and which provably embeds into $\eta$, for which "$\eta$ embeds into $\tau$" cannot be proven.
- Is the non-existence of a dense order type $\kappa$, such that $\eta<\kappa<\lambda$, where $\lambda$ is the order type of the reals, such that $\kappa$ is not the sum of countably-many copies of $\eta$ (or closures thereof), equivalent to the continuum hypothesis?
I suspect that there may be dense, countable order types into which $\eta$ embeds which do not embed into $\eta$. However, I imagine that every such order type is of the form $\sum_{i\in\varphi_\flat(\omega_{0^\star}^{\spadesuit})}\eta_i$, where each $\eta_i$ is either $\eta$ itself or a closure of $\eta$, and $\varphi_\flat(\omega_{0^\star}^\spadesuit)$ is "some stupid-large countable ordinal." So it stands to reason that if there are any other dense orders between $\eta$ and $\lambda$ they must be inaccessible from below. The only way I can see this happening is if $\kappa$ contains more than countably many points, but fewer than continuum many points - which is the negation of the continuum hypothesis. But there might be some other way to get dense orders $<\lambda$ besides pasting together copies of $\eta$, in which case there might still be countable, dense order types which are strictly larger than $\eta$ independently of CH. Intuitively, I would think the exclusion of sums is equivalent to the non-existence of $\kappa$ with the same number of limit points ($2$) as $\eta$ and $\lambda$. If this is the case, it might be easier to show equivalence with CH.