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Aleph number(Redirected from Aleph null)
In the branch of mathematics known as set theory, aleph usually refers to a series of numbers used to represent the cardinality (or size) of infinite sets. The name is that of the symbol used to denote these numbers, the Hebrew letter aleph ( The cardinality of the natural numbers is aleph-null ( The concept goes back to Georg Cantor, who defined the notion of cardinality and realized that infinite sets can have different cardinalities. It should be noted that the aleph numbers are unrelated to the ∞ commonly found in algebra and calculus. Alephs measure the sizes of sets. Infinity (∞), however, could roughly be defined as the extreme limit of the real number line. While some alephs are larger than others, ∞ is just ∞.
Possible originsGeorg Cantor may have had Jewish roots. He may have been familiar with Kabbalah, Jewish mysticism. Kabbalah uses the letter א to denote God, who is referred to as אין סוף, Ayn Sof, the Infinite, in Kabbalah. Perhaps Cantor borrowed the abbreviation and used it to refer to mathematical infinity, rather than theological. Aleph-nullAleph-null ( Aleph-one
Ω is actually pretty useful, if somewhat exotic-sounding. An example application is "closing" with respect to countable operations, e.g. trying to explicitly describe the sigma-algebra generated by an arbitrary collection of subsets. This is harder than most explicit descriptions of "generation" in algebra (for example vector spaces, groups, etc.) because in those cases we only have to close with respect to finite operations — sums, products, and the like. The process involves defining, for each countable ordinal, via transfinite induction, a set by "throwing in" all possible countable unions and complements, and taking the union of all that over all of Ω. The continuum hypothesisThe cardinality of the set of real numbers is This proposition is independent of "ZFC", i.e., of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory conjoined with the axiom of choice: it can be neither proved nor disproved within the context of that axiom system. That it is consistent with ZFC was demonstrated by Kurt Gödel in 1940; that it is independent of ZFC was demonstrated by Paul Cohen in 1963. Aleph-ωConventionally the smallest infinite ordinal is denoted ω, and the cardinal number Aleph-ω is the first uncountable cardinal number that can be demonstrated within Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory not to be equal to the cardinality of the set of all real numbers; for any positive integer n we can consistently assume that Aleph-κ for general κTo define aleph-κ for arbitrary ordinal number κ, we need the successor cardinal operation, which assigns to any cardinal number ρ the next bigger cardinal ρ + . We can then define the aleph numbers as follows and for λ an infinite limit ordinal, See also
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).
), the next larger cardinality is aleph-one
, then comes
and so on. Continuing in this manner, it is possible to define a
for every
. It is not clear where this number fits in the aleph number hierarchy.
In Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory with the axiom of choice, the celebrated
is the smallest upper bound of
, and moreover it is possible to assume