Huge cardinal

In mathematics, a cardinal number κ {\displaystyle \kappa } is called huge if there exists an elementary embedding j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} from V {\displaystyle V} into a transitive inner model M {\displaystyle M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } and

j ( κ ) M M . {\displaystyle {}^{j(\kappa )}M\subset M.}

Here, α M {\displaystyle {}^{\alpha }M} is the class of all sequences of length α {\displaystyle \alpha } whose elements are in M {\displaystyle M} .

Huge cardinals were introduced by Kenneth Kunen (1978).

Variants

In what follows, j n {\displaystyle j^{n}} refers to the n {\displaystyle n} -th iterate of the elementary embedding j {\displaystyle j} , that is, j {\displaystyle j} composed with itself n {\displaystyle n} times, for a finite ordinal n {\displaystyle n} . Also, < α M {\displaystyle {}^{<\alpha }M} is the class of all sequences of length less than α {\displaystyle \alpha } whose elements are in M {\displaystyle M} . Notice that for the "super" versions, γ {\displaystyle \gamma } should be less than j ( κ ) {\displaystyle j(\kappa )} , not j n ( κ ) {\displaystyle {j^{n}(\kappa )}} .

κ is almost n-huge if and only if there is j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } and

< j n ( κ ) M M . {\displaystyle {}^{<j^{n}(\kappa )}M\subset M.}

κ is super almost n-huge if and only if for every ordinal γ there is j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } , γ < j ( κ ) {\displaystyle \gamma <j(\kappa )} , and

< j n ( κ ) M M . {\displaystyle {}^{<j^{n}(\kappa )}M\subset M.}

κ is n-huge if and only if there is j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } and

j n ( κ ) M M . {\displaystyle {}^{j^{n}(\kappa )}M\subset M.}

κ is super n-huge if and only if for every ordinal γ {\displaystyle \gamma } there is j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } , γ < j ( κ ) {\displaystyle \gamma <j(\kappa )} , and

j n ( κ ) M M . {\displaystyle {}^{j^{n}(\kappa )}M\subset M.}

Notice that 0-huge is the same as measurable cardinal; and 1-huge is the same as huge. A cardinal satisfying one of the rank into rank axioms is n {\displaystyle n} -huge for all finite n {\displaystyle n} .

The existence of an almost huge cardinal implies that Vopěnka's principle is consistent; more precisely any almost huge cardinal is also a Vopěnka cardinal.

Kanamori, Reinhardt, and Solovay defined seven large cardinal properties between extendibility and hugeness in strength, named A 2 ( κ ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {A} _{2}(\kappa )} through A 7 ( κ ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {A} _{7}(\kappa )} , and a property A 6 ( κ ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {A} _{6}^{\ast }(\kappa )} .[1] The additional property A 1 ( κ ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {A} _{1}(\kappa )} is equivalent to " κ {\displaystyle \kappa } is huge", and A 3 ( κ ) {\displaystyle \mathbf {A} _{3}(\kappa )} is equivalent to " κ {\displaystyle \kappa } is λ {\displaystyle \lambda } -supercompact for all λ < j ( κ ) {\displaystyle \lambda <j(\kappa )} ". Corazza introduced the property A 3.5 {\displaystyle A_{3.5}} , lying strictly between A 3 {\displaystyle A_{3}} and A 4 {\displaystyle A_{4}} .[2]

Consistency strength

The cardinals are arranged in order of increasing consistency strength as follows:

  • almost n {\displaystyle n} -huge
  • super almost n {\displaystyle n} -huge
  • n {\displaystyle n} -huge
  • super n {\displaystyle n} -huge
  • almost n + 1 {\displaystyle n+1} -huge

The consistency of a huge cardinal implies the consistency of a supercompact cardinal, nevertheless, the least huge cardinal is smaller than the least supercompact cardinal (assuming both exist).

ω-huge cardinals

One can try defining an ω {\displaystyle \omega } -huge cardinal κ {\displaystyle \kappa } as one such that an elementary embedding j : V M {\displaystyle j:V\to M} from V {\displaystyle V} into a transitive inner model M {\displaystyle M} with critical point κ {\displaystyle \kappa } and λ M M {\displaystyle {}^{\lambda }M\subseteq M} , where λ {\displaystyle \lambda } is the supremum of j n ( κ ) {\displaystyle j^{n}(\kappa )} for positive integers n {\displaystyle n} . However Kunen's inconsistency theorem shows that such cardinals are inconsistent in ZFC, though it is still open whether they are consistent in ZF. Instead an ω {\displaystyle \omega } -huge cardinal κ {\displaystyle \kappa } is defined as the critical point of an elementary embedding from some rank V λ + 1 {\displaystyle V_{\lambda +1}} to itself. This is closely related to the rank-into-rank axiom I1.

See also

References

  1. ^ A. Kanamori, W. N. Reinhardt, R. Solovay, "Strong Axioms of Infinity and Elementary Embeddings", pp.110--111. Annals of Mathematical Logic vol. 13 (1978).
  2. ^ P. Corazza, "A new large cardinal and Laver sequences for extendibles", Fundamenta Mathematicae vol. 152 (1997).
  • Kanamori, Akihiro (2003), The Higher Infinite : Large Cardinals in Set Theory from Their Beginnings (2nd ed.), Springer, ISBN 3-540-00384-3.
  • Kunen, Kenneth (1978), "Saturated ideals", The Journal of Symbolic Logic, 43 (1): 65–76, doi:10.2307/2271949, ISSN 0022-4812, JSTOR 2271949, MR 0495118, S2CID 13379542.
  • Maddy, Penelope (1988), "Believing the Axioms. II", The Journal of Symbolic Logic, 53 (3): 736-764 (esp. 754-756), doi:10.2307/2274569, JSTOR 2274569, S2CID 16544090. A copy of parts I and II of this article with corrections is available at the author's web page.