Questions tagged [cardinals]

This tag is for questions about cardinals and related topics such as cardinal arithmetics, regular cardinals and cofinality. Do not confuse with [large-cardinals] which is a technical concept about strong axioms of infinity.

Cardinality is a notion of size for sets, usually denoted by $|A|$ as the "cardinality of $A$". With finite sets the cardinality is simply the number of elements which are members of a set.

Dealing with infinite sets we can measure them in different ways. Cardinal numbers are very natural in the sense that they do not require extra structure (such as relations and operations defined on the set to be preserved).

In formal terms, suppose $f\colon A\to B$ (i.e. $f$ is a function whose domain is $A$ and its range is a subset of $B$).

We say that $f$ is injective if $f(a)=f(b)$ implies $a=b$; we say $f$ is surjective if its range is all $B$, namely for any $b\in B$ there is $a\in A$ such that $f(a)=b$.

If $f$ is both surjective and injective we say that $f$ is a bijection from $A$ to $B$. The inverse of a bijection is also a bijection.

Now we can define an equivalence relation on sets, $A\sim B$ if and only if there is some $f\colon A\to B$ which is a bijection.

Assuming the Axiom of Choice, we have that every set can be well ordered, and therefore there is a least ordinal which is equivalent to $A$, so we can assign it as a canonical representative for the equivalence class, usually denoted by $\aleph_\alpha$ where $\alpha$ is an ordinal, or as general Greek letters such as $\kappa,\lambda$.

Before defining the $\aleph$ numbers we need to define initial ordinals. Let $\alpha$ be an ordinal, if there is no $\beta<\alpha$ and $f\colon\alpha\to\beta$ which is a bijection, then $\alpha$ is called an initial ordinal.

The $\aleph$ numbers are defined by transfinite induction as:

  1. $\aleph_0 = |\omega| = \omega$ (note that $\omega$ is an initial ordinal),
  2. $\aleph_{\alpha+1} = \aleph_\alpha^+$ (where the $\cdot^+$ means the smallest initial ordinal above the one defined for $\aleph_\alpha$)
  3. If $\beta$ is a limit ordinal, then $\displaystyle\aleph_\beta = \bigcup_{\delta<\beta}\aleph_\delta$ (It is easy to verify that the union of initial ordinals is an initial ordinal).

The confinality of an $\aleph$ number is the minimal cardinality of a set which is unbounded in the initial ordinal matching the $\aleph$ number.

A cardinal is called regular if its cofinality is itself, otherwise it is called singular.

Example: $\aleph_0$ is regular, because for a set to be unbounded below $\omega$ it cannot be finite.

$\aleph_1$ is also regular, every ordinal below $\omega_1$ is countable, and the union of countably many countable ordinals is just countable - which is still below $\aleph_1$.

Example: $\aleph_\omega$ is singular, recall $\displaystyle\aleph_\omega=\bigcup_{n<\omega}\aleph_n$. Therefore the set $\{\omega_n\mid n<\omega\}$ (the collection of initial ordinals whose cardinality is less than $\aleph_\omega$) is unbounded, and its cardinality is merely countable.

The question whether or not there exists $\aleph_\delta$ such that $\delta$ is a limit ordinal, but $\aleph_\delta$ is regular is unprovable in ZFC. It is known that it is consistent that there are none, but unknown that it is inconsistent that there are. Cardinals with this property are called Large cardinals and are used for consistency proofs.


In the absence of choice we can no longer have canonical representatives for the equivalence classes, and things become tricky. The class of cardinals can still be defined, however in a slightly different way - usually Scott's trick.

However, to show how things can break down it is consistent with ZF that there is no choice function on the equivalence classes (i.e. you cannot have canonical representatives).

3591 questions
0
votes
2 answers

Cardinality of set of all monotone increasing functions between $\Bbb N$

Let $X =\{f:\Bbb N \rightarrow \Bbb N\mid f \text{ is monotone increasing function}\}$ Then want to find the $card(X)$ First what I know is function $f$ is equal to the monotone increasing sequence that is defined on $\Bbb N$ and I want to find any…
delog
  • 149
0
votes
0 answers

Is $\frak c = \aleph_1$?

Is $\frak c = \aleph_1$? My textbook requires me to find out the cardinality of $I(\Bbb N)$, which is a set of all infinite subset of $\Bbb N$ What I found is cardinality of $I(\Bbb N)$ equals to $2^{\aleph_0} = \frak c$ then is it also okay to…
Daschin
  • 675
0
votes
1 answer

Cardinal of Set of All Finite Subset of $\Bbb N$

Let X be the set of all finite subset of $\Bbb N$. Then let the set $S = \{\xi \mid \xi \approx X, \xi \leqslant 2^X\}$ then Card(X) is the least element of S. First, I can't start with how to exhaust all the element of S. Any advice?
Daschin
  • 675
0
votes
1 answer

Prove that these two sets have equal cardinality

Let $\mathscr{F}$ be the set of functions from $X\rightarrow \{0,1\}$. Then card$(\mathscr{P}(X))$=card$\mathscr{F}$. I am really stuck on this one. How do I show that there is a bijection between those two sets.
KelKel23
  • 169
0
votes
1 answer

Cardinality of the set of all subsets of N

Let us have the set S defined as follows: S:= { $X\subseteq \mathbb N: \sum_{x\in X} x=\infty $} thus S is the set of all subsets X of N such that the sum of the numbers in each set X is infinite. I tend to say that S is countable even though I am…
KeykoYume
  • 492
0
votes
0 answers

Cardinality of subsets with fixed cardinal of a set

Let $\lambda\leq\kappa$ be infinite cardinals. Then $| \{X\subset \kappa | |X|=\lambda \} | = \kappa^{\lambda} $ $\leq$ part is trivial, but I don't know how to prove the other part. I used transfinite induction on $\lambda$ but it didn't work to…
fbg
  • 861
0
votes
1 answer

Cardinal of differentiable functions

Is the cardinal of the set of differentiable functions = card of real numbers? I was thinking of using squeeze rule to show. I know that all differentiable functions are continuous. So card differentiable functions is more than equal to c, but how…
Jus
  • 285
0
votes
1 answer

Question about Cardinality

The question says: $S$ is a set of cardinality $c$. Given two distinct elements $x, y ∈ S$, prove that there exist two disjoint subsets $S_1$ and $S_2$ of $S$ and each of cardinality $c$ such that $x ∈ S_1$ and $y ∈ S_2$. Here is what I am done so…
0
votes
1 answer

Cardinality of polynomials

Lets say the set A consists of all the polynomials. And C denote the cardinal of real numbers. 1.) is the card (A) less than or equal to c? 2.) is the card of range of any nonconstant function from A = C? 3.) the range of any nonconstant…
Jus
  • 285
0
votes
1 answer

How do you find the enumeration of $\mathbb N^3$

I turned it into a three-dimensional array where I have values (i,j,k) but I need to find a function that enumerates $\mathbb N$ x $\mathbb N$ x $\mathbb N$. I found the function for the enumeration of $\mathbb N^2$ which was $(((i+j)(i+j+1))/2) +j$…
kdd
  • 21
0
votes
1 answer

$X$ is infinite and $Y$ at most countable. Why is $\lvert X \rvert = \lvert X \cup Y \rvert$?

While going through my professor' script, I have found the following statement without proof: If $X$ is a infinite set and $Y$ is at most countable then $\lvert X \rvert = \lvert X \cup Y\rvert$. Can someone give me a hint or proof for this?
fpmoo
  • 834
0
votes
2 answers

Is there such set?

Is there a set $A\ \subseteq P(\{x_1, x_2, x_3, \ldots \}) $ of cardinality $\aleph$ such that for every two sets $B,C\in A$: $B\ \cap C=B $ or $B\ \cap C=C $ ?
Itay4
  • 2,166
0
votes
2 answers

Calculating the cardinality

I want to calculate the cardinalities of the following sets: $A = ${a ∈ $ {\mathbb {R}}^{{+}} | a^4∈{\mathbb {N}} $} I belive it's $\!\, \aleph_0 $, but not sure how to prove it. $B = ${a ∈ $ {\mathbb {R}}^{{+}} | ∃n∈{\mathbb {N}} ,$ $…
Itay4
  • 2,166
0
votes
1 answer

Why is the set of all continuous functions of size Beth one?

Why is the set of all continuous functions (from the reals to the reals) of size Beth one? Doesn't that mean that there is a bijection between the real numbers and continuous functions?
Neil G
  • 2,479
0
votes
2 answers

Cardinality of Set. (Tricky)

F={Female students currently enrolled in an engineering program at the university of XYZ and who were born after Jan. 1,2005} I cannot decide whether the cardinality of set F is 1 or 2 or whether this is an empty set. The cardinality will be 1 if…
user407263
  • 11
  • 3