Concept

Normal function

In axiomatic set theory, a function f : Ord → Ord is called normal (or a normal function) if and only if it is continuous (with respect to the order topology) and strictly monotonically increasing. This is equivalent to the following two conditions: For every limit ordinal γ (i.e. γ is neither zero nor a successor), it is the case that f(γ) = sup {f(ν) : ν < γ}. For all ordinals α < β, it is the case that f(α) < f(β). A simple normal function is given by f(α) = 1 + α (see ordinal arithmetic). But f(α) = α + 1 is not normal because it is not continuous at any limit ordinal; that is, the inverse image of the one-point open set is the set , which is not open when λ is a limit ordinal. If β is a fixed ordinal, then the functions f(α) = β + α, f(α) = β × α (for β ≥ 1), and f(α) = βα (for β ≥ 2) are all normal. More important examples of normal functions are given by the aleph numbers , which connect ordinal and cardinal numbers, and by the beth numbers . If f is normal, then for any ordinal α, f(α) ≥ α. Proof: If not, choose γ minimal such that f(γ) < γ. Since f is strictly monotonically increasing, f(f(γ)) < f(γ), contradicting minimality of γ. Furthermore, for any non-empty set S of ordinals, we have f(sup S) = sup f(S). Proof: "≥" follows from the monotonicity of f and the definition of the supremum. For "≤", set δ = sup S and consider three cases: if δ = 0, then S = {0} and sup f(S) = f(0); if δ = ν + 1 is a successor, then there exists s in S with ν < s, so that δ ≤ s. Therefore, f(δ) ≤ f(s), which implies f(δ) ≤ sup f(S); if δ is a nonzero limit, pick any ν < δ, and an s in S such that ν < s (possible since δ = sup S). Therefore, f(ν) < f(s) so that f(ν) < sup f(S), yielding f(δ) = sup {f(ν) : ν < δ} ≤ sup f(S), as desired. Every normal function f has arbitrarily large fixed points; see the fixed-point lemma for normal functions for a proof. One can create a normal function f' : Ord → Ord, called the derivative of f, such that f' (α) is the α-th fixed point of f. For a hierarchy of normal functions, see Veblen functions.

About this result
This page is automatically generated and may contain information that is not correct, complete, up-to-date, or relevant to your search query. The same applies to every other page on this website. Please make sure to verify the information with EPFL's official sources.

Graph Chatbot

Chat with Graph Search

Ask any question about EPFL courses, lectures, exercises, research, news, etc. or try the example questions below.

DISCLAIMER: The Graph Chatbot is not programmed to provide explicit or categorical answers to your questions. Rather, it transforms your questions into API requests that are distributed across the various IT services officially administered by EPFL. Its purpose is solely to collect and recommend relevant references to content that you can explore to help you answer your questions.