Buchholz's psi-functions are a hierarchy of single-argument ordinal functions
introduced by German mathematician Wilfried Buchholz in 1986. These functions are a simplified version of the
-functions, but nevertheless have the same strength[clarification needed] as those. Later on this approach was extended by Jäger[1] and Schütte.[2]
Buchholz defined his functions as follows. Define:
The functions ψv(α) for α an ordinal, v an ordinal at most ω, are defined by induction on α as follows:
- ψv(α) is the smallest ordinal not in Cv(α)
where Cv(α) is the smallest set such that
- Cv(α) contains all ordinals less than Ωv
- Cv(α) is closed under ordinal addition
- Cv(α) is closed under the functions ψu (for u≤ω) applied to arguments less than α.
The limit of this notation is the Takeuti–Feferman–Buchholz ordinal.
Let
be the class of additively principal ordinals. Buchholz showed following properties of this functions:
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The normal form for 0 is 0. If
is a nonzero ordinal number
then the normal form for
is
where
and
and each
is also written in normal form.
Fundamental sequences
[edit]
The fundamental sequence for an ordinal number
with cofinality
is a strictly increasing sequence
with length
and with limit
, where
is the
-th element of this sequence. If
is a successor ordinal then
and the fundamental sequence has only one element
. If
is a limit ordinal then
.
For nonzero ordinals
, written in normal form, fundamental sequences are defined as follows:
- If
where
then
and ![{\displaystyle \alpha [\eta ]=\psi _{\nu _{1}}(\beta _{1})+\cdots +\psi _{\nu _{k-1}}(\beta _{k-1})+(\psi _{\nu _{k}}(\beta _{k})[\eta ]),}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/30c92028163ff888d2dc946d31c41878dc1d848c)
- If
, then
and
,
- If
, then
and
,
- If
then
and
(and note:
),
- If
and
then
and
,
- If
and
then
and
where
.
Buchholz is working in Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory, that means every ordinal
is equal to set
. Then condition
means that set
includes all ordinals less than
in other words
.
The condition
means that set
includes:
- all ordinals from previous set
,
- all ordinals that can be obtained by summation the additively principal ordinals from previous set
,
- all ordinals that can be obtained by applying ordinals less than
from the previous set
as arguments of functions
, where
.
That is why we can rewrite this condition as:
![{\displaystyle C_{\nu }^{n+1}(\alpha )=\{\beta +\gamma ,\psi _{\mu }(\eta )\mid \beta ,\gamma ,\eta \in C_{\nu }^{n}(\alpha )\wedge \eta <\alpha \wedge \mu \leq \omega \}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/d50bbe085fc4bff32c01cfe0cae14499944b3460)
Thus union of all sets
with
i.e.
denotes the set of all ordinals which can be generated from ordinals
by the functions + (addition) and
, where
and
.
Then
is the smallest ordinal that does not belong to this set.
Examples
Consider the following examples:
![{\displaystyle C_{0}^{0}(\alpha )=\{0\}=\{\beta \mid \beta <1\},}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/9b9e8bd7eb7ffabd70195e97740c81cd01046c53)
(since no functions
and 0 + 0 = 0).
Then
.
includes
and all possible sums of natural numbers and therefore
– first transfinite ordinal, which is greater than all natural numbers by its definition.
includes
and all possible sums of them and therefore
.
If
then
and
.
If
then
and
– the smallest epsilon number i.e. first fixed point of
.
If
then
and
.
the second epsilon number,
i.e. first fixed point of
,
, where
denotes the Veblen function,
, where
denotes the Feferman's function and
is the Feferman–Schütte ordinal,
is the Ackermann ordinal,
is the small Veblen ordinal,
is the large Veblen ordinal,
![{\displaystyle \psi _{0}(\Omega \uparrow \uparrow \omega )=\psi _{0}(\varepsilon _{\Omega +1})=\theta (\varepsilon _{\Omega +1},0).}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/789a887f55d6e549cb24ce60051c1ad6a6f446a0)
Now let's research how
works:
![{\displaystyle C_{1}^{0}(0)=\{\beta \mid \beta <\Omega _{1}\}=\{0,\psi (0)=1,2,\ldots {\text{googol}},\ldots ,\psi _{0}(1)=\omega ,\ldots ,\psi _{0}(\Omega )=\varepsilon _{0},\ldots }](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/f594710f0d3143c8ac78890a1dd19626fbc49ca6)
i.e. includes all countable ordinals. And therefore
includes all possible sums of all countable ordinals and
first uncountable ordinal which is greater than all countable ordinal by its definition i.e. smallest number with cardinality
.
If
then
and
.
![{\displaystyle \psi _{1}(2)=\Omega \omega ^{2}=\omega ^{\Omega +2},}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/08e9a3705bbb49a5996e58631020cbd06a560ede)
![{\displaystyle \psi _{1}(\psi _{1}(0))=\psi _{1}(\Omega )=\Omega ^{2}=\omega ^{\Omega +\Omega },}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/56f79b980e8dae8ca77159601351596550352edf)
![{\displaystyle \psi _{1}(\psi _{1}(\psi _{1}(0)))=\omega ^{\Omega +\omega ^{\Omega +\Omega }}=\omega ^{\Omega \cdot \Omega }=(\omega ^{\Omega })^{\Omega }=\Omega ^{\Omega },}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/02773e7e0a59c93dd22a7e984557e0895b262369)
![{\displaystyle \psi _{1}^{4}(0)=\Omega ^{\Omega ^{\Omega }},}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/9ac509356fb8288eefcb4a81f1b60bc52a62dab5)
where
is a natural number,
,
![{\displaystyle \psi _{1}(\Omega _{2})=\psi _{1}^{\omega }(0)=\Omega \uparrow \uparrow \omega =\varepsilon _{\Omega +1}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/b7a0ea944192c60de02c0e16c7cc40db7ac24612)
For case
the set
includes functions
with all arguments less than
i.e. such arguments as
and then
![{\displaystyle \psi _{0}(\Omega _{2})=\psi _{0}(\psi _{1}(\Omega _{2}))=\psi _{0}(\varepsilon _{\Omega +1}).}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/1f52d3d420da962ecf27aee689e516a18d62f8af)
In the general case:
![{\displaystyle \psi _{0}(\Omega _{\nu +1})=\psi _{0}(\psi _{\nu }(\Omega _{\nu +1}))=\psi _{0}(\varepsilon _{\Omega _{\nu }+1})=\theta (\varepsilon _{\Omega _{\nu }+1},0).}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/0aa0c893b3c5c1c25dc0745df110a2f357696695)
We also can write:
![{\displaystyle \theta (\Omega _{\nu },0)=\psi _{0}(\Omega _{\nu }^{\Omega }){\text{ (for }}1\leq \nu )<\omega }](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/3ad753b2d04f560faf78cc3d7f4527ecfb8b0592)
Buchholz[3] defined an ordinal notation
associated to the
function. We simultaneously define the sets
and
as formal strings consisting of
indexed by
, braces and commas in the following way:
,
.
.
.
An element of
is called a term, and an element of
is called a principal term. By definition,
is a recursive set and
is a recursive subset of
. Every term is either
, a principal term or a braced array of principal terms of length
. We denote
by
. By convention, every term can be uniquely expressed as either
or a braced, non-empty array of principal terms. Since clauses 3 and 4 in the definition of
and
are applicable only to arrays of length
, this convention does not cause serious ambiguity.
We then define a binary relation
on
in the following way:
![{\displaystyle b=0\rightarrow a<b=\bot }](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/bcf0c16a8935749197e82493bc58cd04b5265396)
![{\displaystyle a=0\rightarrow (a<b\leftrightarrow b\neq 0)}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/a033f3b0eccae12c4de98fb48f802ede5acd4190)
- If
, then:
- If
for some
, then
is true if either of the following are true:
![{\displaystyle u<v}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/98588673a71757ac2ec75e2c37e017af08f0f75e)
![{\displaystyle u=v\land a'<b'}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/915ecc9917a1f260bbb0bec45feccba58ad17877)
- If
for some
, then
is true if either of the following are true:
![{\displaystyle \forall i\in \mathbb {N} \land i\leq n(n<m\land a_{i}=b_{i})}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/cec347747a80266ccb1550f156ba508df987b785)
![{\displaystyle \exists k\in \mathbb {N} \forall i\in \mathbb {N} \land i<k(k\leq min\{n,m\}\land a_{k}<b_{k}\land a_{i}=b_{1})}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/800c149a1fe00f1b3f1db0b6a6e2f1d4d3de4bd2)
is a recursive strict total ordering on
. We abbreviate
as
. Although
itself is not a well-ordering, its restriction to a recursive subset
, which will be described later, forms a well-ordering. In order to define
, we define a subset
for each
in the following way:
![{\displaystyle a=0\rightarrow G_{u}a=\varnothing }](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/e788018e87b79ff7d0d055a4f94824a86d31b4cc)
- Suppose that
for some
, then:
![{\displaystyle u\leq v\rightarrow G_{u}a=\{a'\}\cup G_{u}a'}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/3bfb0a0db7ede975112a133aae42adfa9c49a025)
![{\displaystyle u>v\rightarrow G_{u}a=\varnothing }](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/2d73d449efcad055cb281485e97c4e1ce3dafb39)
- If
for some
for some
.
is a recursive relation on
. Finally, we define a subset
in the following way:
![{\displaystyle 0\in OT}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/5ab211bd6287b8f5a33552b578e2fa31cd236a2b)
- For any
,
is equivalent to
and, for any
,
.
- For any
,
is equivalent to
and
.
is a recursive subset of
, and an element of
is called an ordinal term. We can then define a map
in the following way:
![{\displaystyle a=0\rightarrow o(a)=0}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/a0261668629d604f7047fe9cf91e3e5825f2e085)
- If
for some
, then
.
- If
for some
with
, then
, where
denotes the descending sum of ordinals, which coincides with the usual addition by the definition of
.
Buchholz verified the following properties of
:
- The map
is an order-preserving bijective map with respect to
and
. In particular,
is a recursive strict well-ordering on
.
- For any
satisfying
,
coincides with the ordinal type of
restricted to the countable subset
.
- The Takeuti-Feferman-Buchholz ordinal coincides with the ordinal type of
restricted to the recursive subset
.
- The ordinal type of
is greater than the Takeuti-Feferman-Buchholz ordinal.
- For any
, the well-foundedness of
restricted to the recursive subset
in the sense of the non-existence of a primitive recursive infinite descending sequence is not provable under
.
- The well-foundedness of
restricted to the recursive subset
in the same sense as above is not provable under
.
The normal form for Buchholz's function can be defined by the pull-back of standard form for the ordinal notation associated to it by
. Namely, the set
of predicates on ordinals in
is defined in the following way:
- The predicate
on an ordinal
defined as
belongs to
.
- The predicate
on ordinals
with
defined as
and
belongs to
.
- The predicate
on ordinals
with an integer
defined as
,
, and
belongs to
. Here
is a function symbol rather than an actual addition, and
denotes the class of additive principal numbers.
It is also useful to replace the third case by the following one obtained by combining the second condition:
- The predicate
on ordinals
with an integer
and
defined as
,
, and
belongs to
.
We note that those two formulations are not equivalent. For example,
is a valid formula which is false with respect to the second formulation because of
, while it is a valid formula which is true with respect to the first formulation because of
,
, and
. In this way, the notion of normal form heavily depends on the context. In both formulations, every ordinal in
can be uniquely expressed in normal form for Buchholz's function.