Rathjen's psi function

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In mathematics, Rathjen's ψ psi function is an ordinal collapsing function developed by Michael Rathjen. It collapses weakly Mahlo cardinals M to generate large countable ordinals.[1] A weakly Mahlo cardinal is a cardinal such that the set of regular cardinals below M is closed under M (i.e. all normal functions closed in M are closed under some regular ordinal <M). Rathjen uses this to diagonalise over the weakly inaccessible hierarchy.

It admits an associated ordinal notation T(M) whose limit (i.e. ordinal type) is ψΩ(χεM+1(0)), which is strictly greater than both |KPM| and the limit of countable ordinals expressed by Rathjen's ψ. |KPM|, which is called the "Small Rathjen ordinal" is the proof-theoretic ordinal of KPM, Kripke–Platek set theory augmented by the axiom schema "for any Δ0-formula H(x,y) satisfying xy(H(x,y)), there exists an addmissible set z satisfying xzy(H(x,y))". It is equal to ψΩ(ψχεM+1(0)(0)) in Rathjen's ψ function.[2]

Definition

Restrict π and κ to uncountable regular cardinals <M; for a function f let dom(f) denote the domain of f; let clM(X) denote X{α<M:α is a limit point of X}, and let enum(X) denote the enumeration of X. Lastly, an ordinal α is said to be to be strongly critical if φα(0)=α.

For αΓM+1 and βM:

β{0,M}Bn(α,β)γ=γ1++γk and γ1,,γkBn(α,β)γBn+1(α,β)γ=φγ0(γ1) and γ0,γ1Bn(α,β)γBn+1(α,β)πBn(α,β)and γ<πγBn+1(α,β)δ,ηBn(α,β)δ<αηdom(χδ)χδ(η)Bn+1(α,β)B(α,β)n<ωBn(α,β)χα=enum(cl(κ:κB(α,κ)αB(α,κ)})).

If κ=χα(β+1) for some (α,β)ΓM+1×M, define κ:=χα(β) using the unique (α,β). Otherwise if κ=χα(0) for some αΓM+1, then define κ:=sup(SCM(α){0}) using the unique α, where SCM(α) is a set of strongly critical ordinals <M explicitly defined in the original source.

For αΓM+1:

κ{κ,M}Cκn(α)γ=γ1++γk and γ1,,γkCn(α)γCn+1(α)γ=φγ0(γ1)γ0,γ1Cn(α,β)γCn+1(α)πCκn(α)κγ<ππRγCκn+1(α)γ=χδ(η)δ,ηCκn(α)γCκn+1(α)γ=Φδ(η)δ,ηCκn(α)0<δδ,η<MγCκn+1(α)β<απ,βCκn(α)βCπ(β)ψπ(β)Cκn+1(α)Cκ(α):=Cκn(α):n<ω.
ψκ(α):=min({ξ:ξCκ(α)}).

Explanation

  • Restrict π to uncountable regular cardinals.
  • enum(X) is a unique increasing function such that the range of enum(X) is exactly X.
  • cl(X) is the closure of X, i.e. X{βLimsup(Xβ)=β}, where Lim denotes the class of non-zero limit ordinals.
  • B0(α,β)=β{0,M}
  • Bn+1(α,β)={γ+δ,φγ(δ),χμ(δ)|γ,δ,μBn(α,β)μ<α}
  • B(α,β)=n<ωBn(α,β)
  • χα(β)=enum(cl({π:B(α,π)MπαB(α,π)}))=enum({βLimsup{π:B(α,π)MπαB(α,π)}β)=β}
  • C0(α,β)=β{0,M}
  • Cn+1(α,β)={γ+δ,φγ(δ),χμ(δ),ψπ(μ)|γ,δ,μ,πBn(α,β)μ<α}
  • C(α,β)=n<ωCn(α,β)
  • ψπ(α)=min({β:C(α,β)πβαC(α,β)})

Rathjen originally defined the ψ function in more complicated a way in order to create an ordinal notation associated to it. Therefore, it is not certain whether the simplified OCF above yields an ordinal notation or not. The original χ functions used in Rathjen's original OCF are also not so easy to understand, and differ from the χ functions defined above.

Rathjen's ψ and the simplification provided above are not the same OCF. This is partially because the former is known to admit an ordinal notation, while the latter isn't known to admit an ordinal notation.[citation needed] Rathjen's ψ is often confounded with another of his OCFs which also uses the symbol ψ, but they are distinct notions. The former one is a published OCF, while the latter one is just a function symbol in an ordinal notation associated to an unpublished OCF.[3]

References