Cofinality #
This file contains the definition of cofinality of an ordinal number and regular cardinals
Main Definitions #
ordinal.cof ois the cofinality of the ordinalo. Ifois the order type of the relation<onα, theno.cofis the smallest cardinality of a subsetsof α that is cofinal inα, i.e.∀ x : α, ∃ y ∈ s, ¬ y < x.cardinal.is_limit cmeans thatcis a (weak) limit cardinal:c ≠ 0 ∧ ∀ x < c, succ x < c.cardinal.is_strong_limit cmeans thatcis a strong limit cardinal:c ≠ 0 ∧ ∀ x < c, 2 ^ x < c.cardinal.is_regular cmeans thatcis a regular cardinal:ω ≤ c ∧ c.ord.cof = c.cardinal.is_inaccessible cmeans thatcis strongly inaccessible:ω < c ∧ is_regular c ∧ is_strong_limit c.
Main Statements #
ordinal.infinite_pigeonhole_card: the infinite pigeonhole principlecardinal.lt_power_cof: A consequence of König's theorem stating thatc < c ^ c.ord.cofforc ≥ ωcardinal.univ_inaccessible: The type of ordinals inType uform an inaccessible cardinal (inType vwithv > u). This shows (externally) that inType uthere are at leastuinaccessible cardinals.
Implementation Notes #
- The cofinality is defined for ordinals.
If
cis a cardinal number, its cofinality isc.ord.cof.
Tags #
cofinality, regular cardinals, limits cardinals, inaccessible cardinals, infinite pigeonhole principle
Cofinality of orders #
Cofinality of a reflexive order ≼. This is the smallest cardinality
of a subset S : set α such that ∀ a, ∃ b ∈ S, a ≼ b.
Cofinality of a strict order ≺. This is the smallest cardinality of a set S : set α such
that ∀ a, ∃ b ∈ S, ¬ b ≺ a.
Equations
- strict_order.cof r = order.cof (λ (x y : α), ¬r y x)
Cofinality of ordinals #
Cofinality of an ordinal. This is the smallest cardinal of a
subset S of the ordinal which is unbounded, in the sense
∀ a, ∃ b ∈ S, a ≤ b. It is defined for all ordinals, but
cof 0 = 0 and cof (succ o) = 1, so it is only really
interesting on limit ordinals (when it is an infinite cardinal).
Equations
- o.cof = quot.lift_on o (λ (a : Well_order), strict_order.cof a.r) ordinal.cof._proof_2
Cofinality of suprema and least strict upper bounds #
Basic results #
A fundamental sequence for a is an increasing sequence of length o = cof a that converges at
a. We provide o explicitly in order to avoid type rewrites.
Infinite pigeonhole principle #
If the union of s is unbounded and s is smaller than the cofinality, then s has an unbounded member
If the union of s is unbounded and s is smaller than the cofinality, then s has an unbounded member
Regular and inaccessible cardinals #
If an infinite type β can be expressed as a union of finite sets,
then the cardinality of the collection of those finite sets
must be at least the cardinality of β.
A cardinal is inaccessible if it is an uncountable regular strong limit cardinal.
Equations
- c.is_inaccessible = (ω < c ∧ c.is_regular ∧ c.is_strong_limit)