Suslin operation

From HandWiki

In mathematics, the Suslin operation ๐“ is an operation that constructs a set from a collection of sets indexed by finite sequences of positive integers. The Suslin operation was introduced by Alexandrov (1916) and Suslin (1917). In Russia it is sometimes called the A-operation after Alexandrov. It is usually denoted by the symbol ๐“ (a calligraphic capital letter A).

Definitions

A Suslin scheme is a family P={Ps:sω<ω} of subsets of a set X indexed by finite sequences of non-negative integers. The Suslin operation applied to this scheme produces the set

𝒜P=xωωnωPxn

Alternatively, suppose we have a Suslin scheme, in other words a function M from finite sequences of positive integers n1,,nk to sets Mn1,...,nk. The result of the Suslin operation is the set

𝒜(M)=(Mn1Mn1,n2Mn1,n2,n3)

where the union is taken over all infinite sequences n1,,nk,

If M is a family of subsets of a set X, then 𝒜(M) is the family of subsets of X obtained by applying the Suslin operation 𝒜 to all collections as above where all the sets Mn1,...,nk are in M. The Suslin operation on collections of subsets of X has the property that 𝒜(𝒜(M))=𝒜(M). The family 𝒜(M) is closed under taking countable unions or intersections, but is not in general closed under taking complements.

If M is the family of closed subsets of a topological space, then the elements of 𝒜(M) are called Suslin sets, or analytic sets if the space is a Polish space.

Example

For each finite sequence sωn, let Ns={xωω:xn=s} be the infinite sequences that extend s. This is a clopen subset of ωω. If X is a Polish space and f:ωωX is a continuous function, let Ps=f[Ns]. Then P={Ps:sω<ω} is a Suslin scheme consisting of closed subsets of X and 𝒜P=f[ωω].

References